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Two-year survival analysis of twisted wire fixed retainer versus spiral wire and fiber-reinforced composite retainers: a preliminary explorative single-blind randomized clinical trial

Korean Journal of Orthodontics 2016³â 46±Ç 2È£ p.104 ~ 110
Farhad Sobouti, Vahid Rakhshan, Mahdi Gholamrezaei Saravi, Ali Zamanian, Mahsa Shariati,
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 ( Farhad Sobouti ) - Iran Mazandaran University Dental Faculty Department of Orthodontics
 ( Vahid Rakhshan ) - Tehran University of Medical Sciences Iranian Tissue Bank and Research Center
 ( Mahdi Gholamrezaei Saravi ) - Iran Mazandaran University Dental Faculty Department of Restorative Dentistry
 ( Ali Zamanian ) - Iran Mazandaran University Dental Faculty Department of Restorative Dentistry
 ( Mahsa Shariati ) - Tehran University of Medical Sciences Craniomaxillofacial Surgery Research Center

Abstract


Objective: Traditional retainers (both metal and fiber-reinforced composite [FRC]) have limitations, and a retainer made from more flexible ligature wires might be advantageous. We aimed to compare an experimental design with two traditional retainers.

Methods: In this prospective preliminary clinical trial, 150 post-treatment patients were enrolled and randomly divided into three groups of 50 patients each to receive mandibular canine-to-canine retainers made of FRC, flexible spiral wire (FSW), and twisted wire (TW). The patients were monitored monthly. The time at which the first signs of breakage/debonding were detected was recorded. The success rates of the retainers were compared using chi-squared, Kaplan-Meier, and Cox proportional-hazard regression analyses (¥á = 0.05).

Results: In total, 42 patients in the FRC group, 41 in the FSW group, and 45 in the TW group completed the study. The 2-year failure rates were 35.7% in the FRC group, 26.8% in the FSW group, and 17.8% in the TW group. These rates differed insignificantly (chi-squared p = 0.167). According to the Kaplan-Meier analysis, failure occurred at 19.95 months in the FRC group, 21.37 months in the FSW group, and 22.36 months in the TW group. The differences between the survival rates in the three groups were not significant (Cox regression p = 0.146).

Conclusions: Although the failure rate of the experimental retainer was two times lower than that of the FRC retainer, the difference was not statistically significant. The experimental TW retainer was successful, and larger studies are warranted to verify these results.

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Fixed orthodontic retainers; Multi-stranded wire; Fiber-reinforced composite; Ligature wire

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SCI(E)
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KoreaMed