# Retrospective analysis of the upper airway anatomy and Sella turcica morphology across different skeletal malocclusions: a computerized technique

**Authors:** Anand Marya, Samroeng Inglam, Adrien Dagnaud, Sujin Wanchat, Prasitthichai Naronglerdrit, Horn Rithvitou, Nattapon Chantarapanich

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12903-024-04867-6 · 2024-09-19

## TL;DR

This study uses CBCT data to analyze airway anatomy and Sella turcica in different skeletal malocclusions, finding volume differences and correlations.

## Contribution

A computerized technique to analyze airway and Sella turcica morphology across skeletal malocclusions using CBCT data.

## Key findings

- Skeletal Class III individuals have reduced nasopharynx volume compared to other groups.
- Skeletal Class II individuals show diminished hypopharynx volume.
- Strong correlations were observed for Sella turcica parameters across skeletal classes.

## Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the normal volumetric space and variations in the measurements of different landmarks in adults with different skeletal relations of the maxilla and the mandible based on CBCT data. The study also analyses these landmarks to locate any correlations.

Numerous studies in orthodontics have found a relationship between orthodontic treatment and changes in the anatomy and function of the airway. Severe changes in airway morphology can cause breathing difficulties, lower quality of life, and even result in life-threatening conditions such as obstructive sleep apnoea. Consequently, orthodontic diagnosis and treatment planning require a thorough understanding of the airway space and its function.

The present retrospective study was conducted using CBCT records of 120 adult patients, containing 40 samples of each skeletal class (20 males and 20 females). The boundaries were defined for the 3 major regions: the nasopharynx, the oropharynx, and the hypopharynx. Various measurements were recorded across these regions, as well as selective cephalometric landmarks. The obtained data was used to calculate average and standard deviation, while regression analysis was used to evaluate correlations and t-test was used to test statistical significance of gender differences.

The results demonstrate that skeletal Class III individuals exhibit a reduced airway volume in the nasopharynx compared to other groups, whereas skeletal Class II individuals displayed a diminished airway volume in the hypopharynx. A strong correlation was observed for Sella turcica parameters. There were no significant differences in skeletal parameters across genders. Nasopharynx cavity volume demonstrated significant differences between skeletal Class I–Class III as well as between skeletal Class II–Class III. Hypopharynx cavity volume also demonstrated significant differences between skeletal Class I–Class II and between skeletal Class II–Class III.

The major findings are the presence of a reduced nasopharyngeal volume in skeletal Class III malocclusions while skeletal Class II individuals displayed a diminished hypopharyngeal volume, making these critical areas to consider during the diagnostic and orthodontic treatment planning stages. This study also revealed a consistent correlation between Sella turcica parameters across various facial skeletal profiles, with skeletal Class II patients exhibiting a distinct pattern and skeletal Class I and Class III demonstrating an average relationship.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** skeletal malocclusions (MESH:D008310), Class III malocclusions (MESH:D008313), obstructive sleep apnoea (MESH:D020181), breathing difficulties (MESH:D004417)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11411739/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11411739