# Effects of Bonded Rapid Palatal Expander on Vertical Dimension: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

**Authors:** Sarah Horne, Doyeon Sung, Hugo Cesar Campos, Shahd Habeb, Luca Sfogliano, Chun-Hsi Chung, Chenshuang Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14197035 · 2025-10-04

## TL;DR

This study reviews evidence on how a bonded rapid palatal expander affects facial height in children, finding minimal vertical changes within six months.

## Contribution

The study provides a systematic review and meta-analysis of BRPE's vertical effects in pediatric patients.

## Key findings

- BRPE treatment leads to slight increases in total, upper, and lower facial height.
- Minimal changes in palatal and occlusal angulation were observed.
- Mandibular plane angulation showed minimal increases across multiple measurements.

## Abstract

Objectives: The current study aimed to summarize the current evidence on vertical control provided by the bonded rapid palatal expander (BRPE) in pediatric patient populations within 6 months after expansion. Methods: Relevant studies were screened independently by two researchers from the eight databases MEDLINE (PubMed), Web of Science, SCOPUS, Embase, Cochrane, LILACS (Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature), LIVIVO and Google Scholar, and supplemented by a manual search of the reference lists from studies selected for full-manuscript reading. Relevant data from lateral cephalograms taken pre- and post-expansion was extracted. A meta-analysis was performed with RStudio and a risk of bias assessment of the included articles was completed. Results: Ten relevant studies were included for data extraction, although most had a high risk of bias. The meta-analysis revealed that within 6-month retention after BRPE treatment, there were (1) slight increases in total (0.83 mm), upper (0.57 mm), and lower (0.70 mm) facial height; (2) minimum change in the palatal plane angulation (−0.01°); (3) minimum change in the occlusal angulation (−0.04°); and (4) minimal mandibular plane angulation changes with 0.01° increase in SN-GoGn angle, 0.71° increase in SN-MP angle, 0.17° increase in FMA, and 0.82° increase in PP-GoGn angle. Conclusions: Current evidence indicates that BRPEs may not control or reduce the vertical dimension significantly within 6 months after expansion. Further high-quality studies, particularly on hyperdivergent patients, are needed to clarify whether bonded expanders offer advantages over traditional banded expanders in management of the vertical dimension.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12525926/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12525926