Cephalometric characteristics of postorthodontic female patients with attractive and unattractive frontal posed smiles

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Abstract

Objectives: To identify differences in skeletal, dental, and soft-tissue morphology between postorthodontic patients with attractive and unattractive frontal posed smiles. Materials and Methods: The attractiveness of close-up photographs of frontal posed smiles in 100 adult female patients after conventional orthodontic treatment was evaluated by 20 dental students (10 men, 10 women) using a visual analogue scale. Posttreatment cephalograms of the 20 patients with the most attractive smiles (attractive group; mean age 23.75 6 3.35 years) and the 20 patients with least attractive smiles (unattractive group; mean age 23.11 6 4.45 years) were selected, and 41 measurements were made and compared between groups using the Mann-Whitney U-test (P, .05). Results: When compared with the attractive group, the unattractive group exhibited greater values for sella-nasion plane to mandibular plane, palatal plane to mandibular plane, anterior facial height, lower facial height, and lower facial height/anterior facial height as skeletal measurements; for occlusal plane to sella-nasion plane, palatal plane to occlusal plane, and maxillary central incisor to palatal plane as dental measurements; and for lower face, upper lip length, and upper lip superior to palatal plane as soft-tissue measurements. Conclusions: Cephalometric analysis revealed that postorthodontic Japanese female patients with unattractive frontal posed smiles are characterized by a hyperdivergent skeletal pattern with extruded maxillary incisors and a steep occlusal plane, accompanied by a longer upper lip than patients achieving attractive posed frontal smiles.

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APA

Kawashima, Y., Kure, K., & Arai, K. (2018). Cephalometric characteristics of postorthodontic female patients with attractive and unattractive frontal posed smiles. Angle Orthodontist, 88(6), 797–805. https://doi.org/10.2319/092017-631.1

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