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1.
Chinese Journal of Sports Medicine ; (6): 941-944, 2017.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-664919

ABSTRACT

Objective To explore factors affecting posterior tibial slope changes after the medial openwedge high tibial osteotomy.Methods The open-wedge high tibial osteotomy was simulated and performed on the three-dimensional proximal tibia model reconstructed based on the computed tomography (CT) scanning,and the roles of hinge axis direction and correction of genu varum in postoperative posterior tibial slope changes were analyzed separately.Results Hinge axis pointing anterolaterally was significantly associated with the increase of postoperative posterior tibial slope with regard to the axis along the anterior-posterior direction.Meanwhile,the correction of the genu varum at a larger angle was also a crucial factor for the increase of postoperative posterior tibial slopes.Conclusion Postoperative posterior tibial slope changes after open-wedge high tibial osteotomy is closely associated with the hinge axis direction and correcting angle of the genu varum.

2.
J. res. dent ; 4(6): 158-161, nov.-dec2016.
Article in English | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1362930

ABSTRACT

The hinge axis is an imaginary line around which the condyles can rotate without translation. Terminal hinge position is the most retruded hinge position and it is significant because it is a learnable, repeatable and recordable position that coincides with the position of centric relation. There are many schools of thought regarding hinge axis. The proponents of Gnathology say that there is one transverse hinge axis common to both condyles which can be accurately located. The proponents of transographics claim that each condyle has a different transverse hinge axis and that a transograph is the only instrument that can duplicate this. Still others claim that an exact duplication of jaw movement is not possible on any machine. The aim of this article is to throw light on location, clinical use and controversies of hinge axis.

3.
Int. j. odontostomatol. (Print) ; 6(2): 205-220, ago. 2012. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-657692

ABSTRACT

Las escuelas de oclusión han creado un constructo mecanicista que busca explicar, bajo un modelo reduccionista y determinista, una dinámica cráneo-cervical y estomatognática compleja. Estos modelos de oclusión le dedican más importancia a la morfología dental y sus geometrías interpretativas que a la morfofisiología estomatognática. La configuración musculo-esquelética cráneo-cervical tiene el poder ganado de influir concomitantemente en la ubicación espacial de la mandíbula e implícitamente en las relaciones interoclusales. La visión actual de la oclusión sigue basándose en observaciones empíricas de un siglo de antigüedad que carecen de soporte apropiado en el marco del nivel de evidencia. En la dimensión funcional los modelos de oclusión conservan los mismos vacíos que existían desde su estructuración en el siglo pasado, particularmente en sus representaciones espaciales estáticas, uniáxicas y anti-dinámicas que desestiman la individualidad de cada sujeto. Cada especialidad puede tener tantas razones como puntos de vista diferentes de "maloclusión" así como formas de tratarla.


Occlusion schools have created a mechanistic construct that seeks to explain, under a reductionist and deterministic model, a craneal-cervical and stomatognathic complex dynamic. These occlusion models dedicate more importance to dental morphology and its interpretative geometries than a stomatognathic morphophysiology. Craneocervical musculoskeletal configuration has the gained power to concomitantly influence the jaw location in the space and implicitly in the interocclusal relations. The current vision of the occlusion is based on empirical observations of almost a century that lack support in the level of evidence framework. In the functional dimension occlusion models maintain the same gaps that existed from its origins since the last century, particularly in its static, uniaxic and anti-dynamic spatial representations that dismiss the individuality of each subject. Each specialty can have as many reasons as different points of view about "malocclusion" as well as techniques to treat it.


Subject(s)
Humans , Anatomy , Biomechanical Phenomena , Dental Occlusion , Temporomandibular Joint , Dental Occlusion, Balanced , Dental Occlusion, Centric , Mastication , Physiology , Temporomandibular Joint Disorders
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