Occlusion/malocclusion Flashcards
Define occlusion
Arrangement and position of teeth with upper and lower teeth in contact in their usual position
Define malocclusion
Tooth position or jaw position outside normal range
What is tooth fusion?
Where two individual teeth are fused together. Each tooth has an individual pulp chamber and root canal
What is tooth germination?
When two teeth develop together and form one tooth. Visibility the crown of the tooth is large and there is only one root canal
What is the cause of a class III malocclusion?
Genetics
What are the dental features of a class II division 2?
- retroclined incisors
- increased interincisal angle
- increased overbite
- overjet reduced
- buccal segments class II
- scissor bite maybe present
- proclined lateral incisors
What are the skeletal features of a class II division 2?
- AP - usually class I, could be II or III
- vertical - reduced lower anterior face height
- transverse - anomalies can be present, maybe scissor bite
What local factors can cause malocclusions?
- variation in tooth number - eg supernumeraries, hypodontia
- variation in tooth form - eg macrodontia, microdontia
- variation in tooth position - eg ectopic canine, transposition
- abnormalities of soft tissues - eg fraenum = midline diastema
- pathology - eg cysts = impacts eruption, scarring
- delayed tooth loss
What is the prevalence of Class III malocclusion in the general population?
3%
What are the soft tissue features of a Class II Div 2?
- high lower lip lobe
- pronounced labiomental fold
- strap like lip
What genetic influences affect malocclusion?
- skeletal pattern
- syndromes
- evolutionary trend to decrease jaw size and tooth number
What environmental influences effect malocclusion?
- soft tissues - neutral zone
- habits
- local factors
- pathology
- trauma
- respiration (little effect)
What reasons may a tooth fail to erupt?
- supernumerary
- retained deciduous tooth
- crowding
- canines - long path of eruption
- cysts
What is infraocclusion?
A tooth remains in its original plane whilst the rest of the arch develops laterally and vertically, making it appear submerged
What are possible problems of an infraoccluded tooth?
- space loss
- wedging of primary tooth
- difficult access for OH, restoration or extraction