Supervisors: Dr Li Mei and Mrs Florence Bennani Survival times and reasons for failure of...

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Supervisors: Dr Li Mei and Mrs Florence Bennani

Survival times and reasons for failure of orthodontic retainers:

a pilot study

Introduction

Orthodontic retention =

“secondary orthodontic treatment”

McCoy, 1935

Definition

Retention: “the holding of teeth following orthodontic treatment in

the treated position for the period of time necessary for maintenance of

the result”

Moyers, 1973

Factors contributing to relapse

Contraction of stretched & displaced gingival & periodontal fibres

Imbalance in soft tissue pressures vs new positions of teeth

Post-treatment occlusal stability & functionality

Reitan, 1967, 1969; Blake and Bibby, 1998; Littlewood et al., 2009; Shawesh et al., 2010

Reitan, 1959

Animal study Teeth were rotated Following retention period of 232

days, supra-alveolar periodontal fibres continue to show displacement

Fibrous tissue rearrangement even after several years!

Period of retention New Zealand & Australia:

>2 years (nearly 1/3rd of orthodontists)

Lifetime retention both removable & fixed – (over 1/5th of orthodontists)

Netherlands: >1 year - removable (80% of orthodontists)

Permanent – fixed (84% of orthodontists)

Wong and Freer, 2004; Renkema et al., 2009

Choice of retainer type Pre-treatment occlusion Post-treatment occlusion Oral hygiene Patient compliance Aesthetics Comfort LONGEVITY

Wong and Freer 2004; Littlewood et al., 2009; Renkema et al., 2009

Aims

To assess: Survival times (range and rate) Reasons for failure of retainers used in

the discipline of orthodontics

To provide: Baseline for the choice of retention

protocol

Eligibility criteria

InclusionFixed

orthodontic appliances

Initiated in 2010-2011

Completed by August

2012

Upper and/or lower

retainers Minimum retention = 24 months

Agreement to

participate

Postgraduate clinic

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion

Incomplete / missing files

Retainers worn <24 months

Reasons for

breakage irrelevant

Method

60 patients Telephone contact Standard questionnaire:

Demographic data

Retainer types received

Problems

Survival time

Confirmed with patients’ files

Data analysis

First retainers only Survival time in months

From date patient received retainer failure date

To end of August 2014

Results

117 retainers included 38 lower fixed

11 lower vacuum-formed

17 upper fixed

30 upper Hawley

21 upper vacuum-formed

Overall:Maxillary retainers – 58.8%Mandibular retainers – 59.2%

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Percentage

Survival rate at 24 months

Survival rate for upper retainers – 6 monthly intervals

Start 6 12 18 2450

55

60

65

70

75

80

85

90

95

100

Vacuum-formed

Fixed

Hawley

Percentage

Months

Survival rate for lower retainers – 6 monthly intervals

Start 6 12 18 2450

55

60

65

70

75

80

85

90

95

100

Vacuum-formed

Fixed

Perc

en

tag

e

Months

Numbers and reasons for retainer failures

Characteristics Broken Lost Poor Fit Debond (Total)

Maxillary  

Hawley 7 3 1 0 (30)

Vacuum-formed 6 2 1 0 (21)

Fixed 4 0 0  4 (17)

Mandibular  

Hawley 0 0 0 0  (0)

Vacuum-formed 1 1 1 0 (11)

Fixed 3 0 0 13 (38)

Discussion Interest of the study

Retention time minimum 24 months Upper & lower retention regimen

Findings Most failures in first 6 months except for

lower vacuum-formed Early tendency for relapse? (Reitan 1967;

1979)

Results in accordance with worldwide studies

Limitation Retrospective data collection

Discussion: further observations

Retainer combinations 18 patients: UF + UV and/or UH

Impact on survival time? 10 patients: UH + UV

part time retainer wear

Conclusion

24-month retainer survival rates: Lower vacuum-formed Upper Hawley (Breakage) Lower fixed (Debonding) Upper vacuum-formed (Breakage) Upper fixed

Clinical relevance

Upper retainer of choice = Hawley Lower retainer of choice = Vacuum-

formed Schedule more review appointments

during first 6 months of retention

Thank you

Questions?