Occlusion/malocclusion Flashcards

1
Q

Define occlusion

A

Arrangement and position of teeth with upper and lower teeth in contact in their usual position

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2
Q

Define malocclusion

A

Tooth position or jaw position outside normal range

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3
Q

What is tooth fusion?

A

Where two individual teeth are fused together. Each tooth has an individual pulp chamber and root canal

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4
Q

What is tooth germination?

A

When two teeth develop together and form one tooth. Visibility the crown of the tooth is large and there is only one root canal

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5
Q

What is the cause of a class III malocclusion?

A

Genetics

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6
Q

What are the dental features of a class II division 2?

A
  • retroclined incisors
  • increased interincisal angle
  • increased overbite
  • overjet reduced
  • buccal segments class II
  • scissor bite maybe present
  • proclined lateral incisors
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7
Q

What are the skeletal features of a class II division 2?

A
  • AP - usually class I, could be II or III
  • vertical - reduced lower anterior face height
  • transverse - anomalies can be present, maybe scissor bite
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8
Q

What local factors can cause malocclusions?

A
  • 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
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9
Q

What is the prevalence of Class III malocclusion in the general population?

A

3%

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10
Q

What are the soft tissue features of a Class II Div 2?

A
  • high lower lip lobe
  • pronounced labiomental fold
  • strap like lip
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11
Q

What genetic influences affect malocclusion?

A
  • skeletal pattern
  • syndromes
  • evolutionary trend to decrease jaw size and tooth number
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12
Q

What environmental influences effect malocclusion?

A
  • soft tissues - neutral zone
  • habits
  • local factors
  • pathology
  • trauma
  • respiration (little effect)
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13
Q

What reasons may a tooth fail to erupt?

A
  • supernumerary
  • retained deciduous tooth
  • crowding
  • canines - long path of eruption
  • cysts
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14
Q

What is infraocclusion?

A

A tooth remains in its original plane whilst the rest of the arch develops laterally and vertically, making it appear submerged

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15
Q

What are possible problems of an infraoccluded tooth?

A
  • space loss
  • wedging of primary tooth
  • difficult access for OH, restoration or extraction
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16
Q

What are signs to watch out for with an infraoccluded primary tooth?

A
  • tooth inferior/lower position to adjacent teeth
  • tipping of adjacent teeth
  • decrease of arch length
  • presence/absence of permanent successor
17
Q

What is crowding?

A

A discrepancy between tooth and jaw size that results in misalignment of the teeth