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Evaluation of Skeletal and Dental Maturity in Relation to Vertical Facial Types and the Sex of Growing Children

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Á¶¼±°æ ( Jo Seon-Gyeong ) - Wonkwang University College of Dentistry Department of Pediatric Dentistry
±èº´È­ ( Kim Byoung-Hwa ) - Wonkwang University College of Dentistry Department of Pediatric Dentistry
ÀÌÁ¦¿ì ( Lee Je-Woo ) - Wonkwang University College of Dentistry Department of Pediatric Dentistry
¶óÁö¿µ ( Ra Ji-Young ) - Wonkwang University College of Dentistry Department of Pediatric Dentistry

Abstract


The purpose of this retrospective study was to evaluate the skeletal and dental maturity according to the vertical facial type and sex in Korean children in the developmental stage. In total, 184 participants aged 8 - 14 years were selected and divided into three groups based on the mandibular plane angle. For the comparison between the sexes, the three groups were each divided into male and female subgroups. The skeletal and dental maturity were assessed using lateral cephalograms, hand-wrist radiographs and panoramic radiographs. The vertical growth group showed significantly greater cervical vertebral and hand-wrist maturity than that in the horizontal growth group. Dental maturity was the highest in the vertical growth group. Girls showed greater skeletal maturity than boys, and no distinct difference was observed between the dental maturity of the sexes. Analysis of the vertical facial type in children can provide ancillary indicators that may help determine the optimal timing for orthodontic treatment initiation. Earlier initiation of orthodontic treatment may be considered for patients with vertical facial growth patterns.

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Vertical facial type; Mandibular plane angle; Skeletal maturity; Dental maturity

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