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- Title
Rapid maxillary expansion in therapy-resistant enuretic children: An orthodontic perspective.
- Authors
Bazargani, Farhan; Jönson-Ring, Ingrid; Nevéus, Tryggve
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether rapid maxillary expansion (RME) could reduce the frequency of nocturnal enuresis (NE) in children and whether a placebo effect could be ruled out. Methods: Thirty-four subjects, 29 boys and five girls with mean age of 10.7 ±1.8 years suffering from primary NE, were recruited. All subjects were nonresponders to the first-line antienuretic treatment and therefore were classified as "therapy resistant." To rule out a placebo effect of the RME appliance, all children were first treated with a passive appliance for 4 weeks. Rhinomanometry (RM), acoustic rhinometry (AR), polysomnographic registration, and study casts were made at different time points. Results: One child experienced severe discomfort from the RME appliance and immediately withdrew from the study. Following RME, the long-term cure rate after 1 year was 60%. The RM and AR measurements at baseline and directly after RME showed a significant increase in nasal volume and nasal airflow, and there was a statistically significant correlation between reduction in enuresis and increase in nasal volume. Six months postretention, a 100% relapse of the dental overexpansion could be noted. Conclusions: RME has a curative effect in some children with NE, which could be connected to the positive influence of RME on the sleep architecture. Normal transverse occlusion does not seem to be a contraindication for moderate maxillary expansion in attempts to cure NE in children.
- Subjects
MAXILLARY expansion; ENURESIS; ORTHODONTICS; ACOUSTIC rhinometry; REGRESSION analysis
- Publication
Angle Orthodontist, 2016, Vol 86, Issue 3, p481
- ISSN
0003-3219
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2319/051515-329.1