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A Clinical Study to Correlate the Facial Form and Maxillary Central Incisor Tooth Form in Males and Females of Davangere Population


Affiliations
1 Department of Prosthodontics, Bhojia Dental College and Hospital, Himachal Pradesh, India
2 Department of Oral Medicine, Daswani Dental College, Rajasthan, India
 

An altered facial appearance is more difficult to face, than problems related to ill-fitting denture or eating. The selection of maxillary anterior teeth for complete denture has long posed problem in clinical practice and a controversy about the best method to employ still exists. An attempt is made in the present study to clinically correlate the face form with maxillary central incisor tooth form in males and females of Davangere population. In 1914, Leon William's projected the "the form method" where he classified facial forms as square, tapering, and ovoid. Maxillary central incisors were selected according to the facial forms.
Of total 100 subjects four different tooth forms and face forms were evaluated. They are: square, ovoid, square-tapered, tapered. No significant correlation existed between face form in male and females. Females exhibited greater correlation between face forms and inverted tooth form but that correlation is not sufficient to serve as a guide for selection of anterior teeth.


Keywords

Zirconia, Tooth Form, Face Form, Maxillary Central Incisor.
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  • A Clinical Study to Correlate the Facial Form and Maxillary Central Incisor Tooth Form in Males and Females of Davangere Population

Abstract Views: 287  |  PDF Views: 89

Authors

Deepak Bansal
Department of Prosthodontics, Bhojia Dental College and Hospital, Himachal Pradesh, India
Shruti Sharma
Department of Oral Medicine, Daswani Dental College, Rajasthan, India
Manjit Kumar
Department of Prosthodontics, Bhojia Dental College and Hospital, Himachal Pradesh, India
Amrit Khosla
Department of Prosthodontics, Bhojia Dental College and Hospital, Himachal Pradesh, India

Abstract


An altered facial appearance is more difficult to face, than problems related to ill-fitting denture or eating. The selection of maxillary anterior teeth for complete denture has long posed problem in clinical practice and a controversy about the best method to employ still exists. An attempt is made in the present study to clinically correlate the face form with maxillary central incisor tooth form in males and females of Davangere population. In 1914, Leon William's projected the "the form method" where he classified facial forms as square, tapering, and ovoid. Maxillary central incisors were selected according to the facial forms.
Of total 100 subjects four different tooth forms and face forms were evaluated. They are: square, ovoid, square-tapered, tapered. No significant correlation existed between face form in male and females. Females exhibited greater correlation between face forms and inverted tooth form but that correlation is not sufficient to serve as a guide for selection of anterior teeth.


Keywords


Zirconia, Tooth Form, Face Form, Maxillary Central Incisor.