Picture this: You’ve got a patient with teeny-tiny lateral incisors that look like they skipped the memo on proportional growth. Or, on the flip side, some chonky premolars that are hogging all the real estate. What do we do? Simple—adjust the mesiodistal width!

✔ For Small Teeth – We create extra space to allow for bonding, veneers, or crowns to bring them up to size. Because no one likes an awkward gap-toothed smile (unless it’s intentional, looking at you, Madonna 😏).

✔ For Large Teeth – Approximal enamel reduction (IPR) helps make room. Think of it as giving teeth a little diet plan—just a millimeter here and there to slim them down.

Ah, extractions—the ortho version of the “big reset.” But don’t be fooled—yanking a tooth doesn’t mean we magically get all that space for crowding. Posterior teeth love to creep forward like uninvited guests at a party. 😩

So, how much space do we actually get? It depends on:

🦷 Which teeth are extracted – First premolars? Second premolars? Each has a different impact.

🦷 Which arch is involved – Because upper and lower play by different rules.

🦷 Whether second molars are banded – If they are, things get trickier!

🦷 Where the crowding is – Front? Back? Everywhere? 😵‍💫

🦷 Canine retraction – More crowding = more canine movement needed.

🦷 Angulation of extraction space – Are we working with nicely upright teeth or rebellious ones tilting all over the place?

Frustratingly, literature isn’t super helpful here. Most space studies were done eons ago when clinical decisions were based on vibes rather than solid science. Plus, every case is different—5mm of crowding in one patient doesn’t always mean the same thing in another.

📌 First premolar extractions: 40-65% of space helps relieve anterior crowding (without anchorage reinforcement).
📌 Second premolar extractions: Only 25-50% of space benefits the front.
📌 Upper arch ≠ Lower arch! Upper molars tend to move forward more, reducing net space.

We use different anchorage devices to prevent teeth from shifting where we don’t want them to:

🚫 Lingual Arches – Good for holding space, but weak for active anchorage.
✅ Nance Buttons – Can help early on, but must be removed before full retraction.
❌ Jones Jigs & Pendulum Appliances – As much mesial premolar movement as distal molar movement. Not great. 🙃
👑 Headgear (Classic, but Gold Standard) – Best for reinforcing anchorage! 🎯
🚀 Mini-Implants & Onplants – The future of ortho anchorage! 💡🔩

Missing Teeth: To Open or Not to Open? ❌

When a tooth is missing, you’ve got two choices:
✅ Close the space by shifting teeth together.
✅ Keep the space open for a prosthetic replacement.

💡 Example: If a lateral incisor is missing, you need 6-7 mm of space for a prosthetic replacement (implant, bridge, or RPD). It’s the same logic as building up small teeth—we make space where needed for ideal esthetics and function.

⚠️ Watch out for Bolton Discrepancies! If you close space but end up with mismatched tooth sizes between upper and lower arches, occlusion might go crazy! 😵‍💫

Molar Movement: The Great Migration 🚛🦷

Molars don’t like to stay put. They move forward, backward, and sometimes just ruin your anchorage plans. 😤

So, what controls molar movement? Let’s break it down:

🛑 To move molars back (distalization):
➡️ Distalizing Headgear – Old school but effective. (If patients actually wear it! 😅)
➡️ Pendulum Appliance / TADs – More modern, less compliance-dependent.
➡️ Intermaxillary Elastics – Helps, but watch out for anchorage loss.
➡️ Orthognathic Surgery – Extreme cases only!

🚀 To move molars forward (mesialization):
➡️ Protraction Headgear – Pulls upper molars forward.
➡️ Intra-arch Traction – Springs, elastics, or coil springs to bring molars forward.
➡️ Functional Appliances – Great in growing patients with Class II patterns.
➡️ Natural Growth – Works best in growing kids, but unpredictable.

💡 Molar movement = Space gained or lost! If you don’t account for molar migration, your whole space plan can backfire.

📌 Example:
If you extract first premolars to fix crowding but lose anchorage, molars might slide forward too much, leaving little space for retraction. Congrats, you just lost the space you worked so hard to get! 😬

Molar movement should always be planned with: ✅ Anchorage control (Headgear, TADs, Nance, etc.)
✅ Interarch considerations (Class II, Class III adjustments)
✅ Final occlusion goals (Are we aiming for Class I?)

When planning space, you need to predict growth, especially in:
🔹 Class II cases (Mandible may “catch up”)
🔹 Class III cases (Mandible keeps moving forward 😨)

👉 Most patients in permanent dentition don’t have major A-P growth changes. But in boys with Class II or Class III patterns, things get interesting!

For some Class II cases, the mandible grows forward during the mid-to-late teens, reducing the overjet. Sounds great, right? Well, here’s the paradox in space planning:

🦷 Mandibular growth = Less space needed in the upper arch!
✅ If a patient has favorable mandibular growth, you can reduce upper arch space requirements by about +2 mm (1 mm per side).

💡 Space planning tip: Consider leaving slightly extra space in the upper arch in growing Class II cases since overjet may self-correct.

Bad news: Class III cases usually get worse with growth. 😭
📉 Mandibular growth increases lower arch space requirements, leading to even more crowding in the lower arch!

🦷 How much extra space?
🔹 Plan for –2 mm to –4 mm of extra lower arch space to accommodate future incisor compensation.

💡 Space planning tip: If a Class III patient is still growing, be cautious—things might get worse, and surgery might be needed later. 🚑

After accounting for:✅ Extractions 🦷❌✅ Tooth reduction/enlargement ✂️✅ Molar movement 🔄

✅ Growth effects 📏