# Effects of modified twin block appliance in growing Class II high angle cases: A cephalometric study

**Authors:** Kanistika Jha, Manoj Adhikari

PMC · DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.109040.1 · F1000Research · 2022-04-25

## TL;DR

This study shows that a modified twin block appliance can effectively correct jaw alignment in children with a specific type of bite problem.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the effectiveness of a modified twin block appliance in high-angle Class II malocclusion cases using cephalometric analysis.

## Key findings

- The mandible position improved significantly with increased SNB angle and decreased ANB angle.
- Soft tissue changes like increased nasolabial angle and reduced lower lip protrusion were observed.
- Vertical parameters showed minimal or non-significant changes, indicating good vertical control.

## Abstract

Background: Class II malocclusions represent anteroposterior dysplasia usually resulting from mandibular retrusion. Along with a retropositioned mandible, it can be associated with either upward or backward jaw rotation. High angle cases are often associated with a short ramal height, steeper mandibular plane, and large gonial angle. Twin block is a commonly used myofunctional appliance that incorporates bite planes that direct the occlusal forces in a more favorable direction for correction of the retrognathic mandible. We aimed to evaluate skeletal, dental, and soft tissue changes following modified twin block appliance therapy in high-angle cases.

Methods: A cephalometric study was performed on 15 growing (10-14 years) high angle (Frankfort mandibular angle 28-35°) Class II Division I malocclusion patients undergoing twin block therapy. Skeletal, dental, and soft tissue changes were evaluated by cephalometric analysis using Dolphin software.

Results: Pre- and post-treatment changes in cephalograms were assessed by analysis of variance and paired t-test. Significant changes in the position of the mandible (angle between Sella-Nasion-Point B [SNB] increased by 3.9 degrees, P=0.02), Wits appraisal (decreased by 2.46 mm, P=0.04), maxillo-mandibular relationship (angle between Point A-Nasion-Point B [ANB] decreased by 3.73 degrees, P=0.02) were observed. Soft tissue changes like the nasolabial angle were also significant, increasing by 3.8 degrees (P=0.04) and lower lip relation to E-line (reduction in lower lip protrusion) by 2 mm (P=0.04). Vertical parameters showed non-significant changes, like the Frankfort mandibular angle (FMA) increased by 0.07 degrees, (P=0.67), the angle between Sella-Nasion and Gonion-Gnathion (SN-Go-Gn) increased by 0.33 degrees, (P=0.67), Y-axis increased by 0.2 degrees, (P=0.32). The upper incisor inclination decreased non-significantly from 5.60±1.24 to 4.20±0.86 degrees, (P=0.31) and lower incisor increased non-significantly from 100.13±2.23 to 101.80±1.37 degrees, (P=0.08).

Conclusions: Modified twin block appliance can be used to successfully treat Class II Division I high angle cases with good vertical control.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anteroposterior dysplasia (MESH:D015792), mandibular retrusion (MESH:D063173), Class II Division I malocclusion (MESH:D008312)
- **Chemicals:** appliance (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11053348/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11053348