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Clinical Trial
. 2002 May;121(5):447-57.
doi: 10.1067/mod.2002.122241.

Fränkel appliance therapy and the temporomandibular disc: a prospective magnetic resonance imaging study

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Clinical Trial

Fränkel appliance therapy and the temporomandibular disc: a prospective magnetic resonance imaging study

Alexandre A Franco et al. Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop. 2002 May.

Abstract

This prospective clinical study assessed the effect of the Fränkel Functional Regulator-II (FR-II) treatment on the position and shape of the articular disc of the temporomandibular joint. The sample included magnetic resonance images of 112 temporomandibular joints taken initially (T1) and after 18 +/- 1 months (T2). The subjects were 56 white Brazilian children who were beginning their pubertal growth spurt. They had Class II Division 1 malocclusions and were selected from 800 children in neighborhood schools. They were randomly dichotomized into either the treated group (treated with the FR-II for 18 months) or the control group (not treated during the observation period). Our findings showed a low prevalence (3.57%) of disc displacement in the 112 temporomandibular joints. Mandibular propulsion with the FR-II had no unfavorable effect on the temporomandibular joints of the treated group; 100% of the patients kept an upper and interposed disc position (closed and open mouth, respectively) at T1 and T2. The control group had 7.1% partial anterior medial disc displacement, both at T1 and T2. Regarding disc morphology, the control group showed biconcave-shaped discs in 82.1% of the joints, statistically similar to the treated group (89.3%) at the beginning of the observation period. At T2, the articular disc morphology of the control group was unchanged, but that of the treated group was significantly more normal (P =.016), progressing from nonbiconcave at T1 (10.7%) to biconcave at T2 (100%). Our results showed that disc displacement is not a complication of functional appliance therapy; in fact, such treatment might help some children with incipient temporomandibular disorders.

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