Introduction
Malocclusion, characterized by changes in teeth positioning and skeletal growth, represents a global public health concern.
- Historical Context: Correction attempts date back to at least 1000 BC.
- Prevalence: Class II malocclusion affects one-third of the population and is categorized as skeletal or dental in origin.
- Etiology:
- Only 20% of Class II Division 1 cases are due to maxillary protrusion.
- The majority stem from mandibular retrusion.
This prevalence has led to the development of functional appliances aimed at stimulating mandibular growth. These devices are divided into removable and fixed functional appliances.
Fixed Functional Appliances
- Types:
- Rigid: Herbst appliance, MARA (Mandibular Advancement Repositioning Appliance).
- Flexible: Jasper Jumper, Scandee tubular jumpers.
- Hybrid: Forsus Fatigue Resistant Device (FFRD).
- Forsus Fatigue Resistant Device (FFRD):
- A telescoping spring mechanism for Class II correction.
- Provides moderate patient tolerance with initial discomfort that subsides over time.
- PowerScope Appliance:
- Latest addition, introduced by Dr. Andy Hayes in 2016 in collaboration with American Orthodontics.
- Features a telescopic mechanism with a nickel-titanium (NiTi) spring delivering 260 g constant force.
- Designed as a preassembled, one-size-fits-all appliance for easy chairside application.
Study Rationale
While Forsus FRD is extensively studied, limited literature evaluates and compares the skeletal, dental, and soft tissue effects of PowerScope. This study bridges that gap by conducting a cephalometric evaluation and comparison of these two fixed functional appliances.
A_Cephalometric_Evaluation_and_Comparison_of_SkeleDownload
| Aspect | Parameter | Forsus FRD | PowerScope | Comparison |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skeletal Changes | Lower gonial angle | Decreased significantly (P = .005) | Increased (P = .009) | Better effect in Forsus. |
| SNA | Decreased (P = .037) | No significant change | Forsus > PowerScope (P = .026). | |
| SNB | Increased significantly (P < .001) | Increased significantly (P < .001) | Both effective. | |
| ANB | Decreased significantly (P < .001) | Decreased significantly (P < .001) | Both effective. | |
| Wits, beta, and YEN angles | Increased significantly (P < .001) | Increased significantly (P < .001) | Both effective. | |
| NA‖HP | Decreased significantly (P = .001) | Decreased (P = .022) | Both effective. | |
| NB‖HP | Increased significantly (P < .001) | Increased significantly (P < .001) | Both effective. | |
| Effective mandibular length | Increased (P < .001) | Increased significantly | Both effective. | |
| Dentoalveolar Changes | L1-NB and L1-NPog | Increased significantly (P = .013, P = .014) | Mild increase | PowerScope > Forsus. (P = .011 for IMPA). |
| IMPA (Incisor mandibular plane angle) | Increased significantly (P = .001) | Increased significantly | PowerScope > Forsus. | |
| U1-SN and U1-NA | No significant change | Decreased (P = .021, P = .026) | PowerScope effective due to distalization effect. | |
| Interincisal angle | Decreased significantly (P = .034) | No significant change | Forsus effective. | |
| Soft Tissue Changes | Facial convexity | Decreased significantly (P < .001) | Decreased significantly (P < .001) | PowerScope > Forsus (P = .044). |
| Nasolabial angle | Increased significantly (P = .035) | Mild increase | Forsus > PowerScope (P = .017). | |
| Upper lip strain | Decreased significantly (P < .001) | Decreased significantly (P = .012) | Both effective. | |
| Upper lip-to-E line | Insignificant change | Increased significantly (P = .009) | PowerScope > Forsus. | |
| Overjet/Overbite | Reduction | Highly significant (P < .001) | Highly significant (P < .001) | No significant intergroup difference (P > .05). |
| Aspect | Forsus FRD | PowerScope |
|---|---|---|
| Skeletal Changes | More maxillary retrusion, greater SNB increase | Greater impact on mandibular advancement |
| Dentoalveolar | Significant lower incisor proclination | Better upper incisor inclination correction |
| Soft Tissue | Greater improvement in nasolabial angle | Better profile correction (facial convexity) |
| Overjet/Overbite | Effective | Effective |
Both appliances are effective in correcting Class II discrepancies caused by retrognathic mandibles. However:
- Forsus FRD is superior in achieving skeletal changes, particularly maxillary retrusion and mandibular advancement.
- PowerScope shows more pronounced effects on dentoalveolar and soft tissue parameters, especially upper incisor inclination correction and facial convexity improvement.
