What Is Palatal Expansion
What Is Palatal Expansion
What Is Palatal Expansion
- Expansion of the maxillary arch is often necessary for the correction of some of
the relatively common malocclusions like
Maxillary constrictions (narrow maxillary base or wide mandible)
And also for the correction of skeletal disharmony and dentofacial deformities like
Class III malocclusions, pseudo class III with posterior crossbite and/or
constricted maxilla .
All these are actually nothing but Transverse deficiency of the Maxilla.
2. Types of expansion :
Orthodontic, Orthopaedic, Passive
Orthopaedic Expansion-
CHANGES are produced in the skeletal structure. Dentoalveolar expansion is less.
Ex: RME causes separation of mid palatal suture, and also affects circumzygomatic &
circumaxillary suture. After expansion, new bone is deposited in the mid palatal
suture.
Passive Expansion-
Ex: Frankel appliance – when we shield the dentition from forces of labial and buccal
musculature. – results in passive expansion.
- it involves rapid force application to the posterior teeth. The forces are transmitted to
the sutures and the sutures open while the teeth move minimally relative to the
supporting bone.
- This conept was reported in the literature in 1860 first in the Dental Cosmos by
Emerson C Angell.
In young adults and adolescents after the pubertal growth spurt with advanced
skeletal maturity, the effects of non-surgical RPE differ consideratbly.1 It has been
showed that there are higher success rates of RPE in young population and the
success rates decreased with increasing age up to 18 years and 21 years
The reason for the failure of RPE is because of the higher rigidity of the craniofacial
structures in patients who are skeletally mature.
The maturation process of the midpalatal suture has been studied using histologic and
micro-computed tomography of autopsy samples, which Melsen describes using a three-
stage maturation process.
In the infantile period, from a coronal-slice perspective, the suture appears as very
broad and Y-shaped with the vomer bone lodged in a furrow between the two halves of
the maxilla.
The juvenile period is characterized by bony projections into the suture from the right
and left maxilla creating a winding suture.
In the adolescent period, bony interdigitation continues and the suture becomes
progressively more tortuous.
Finally in adulthood, around the third decade of life, the suture eventually becomes
obliterated by calcified tissue
As this process progresses, the bony projections continue to interlock and the suture is
considered “closed” around age 16 years in females and 18 years in males. In adulthood,
around the third decade of life, the suture eventually becomes obliterated by calcified
tissue. The fusion process begins at the posterior aspect of the suture and progresses
anteriorly, but there is considerable variation between individuals with regard to timing
for the initiation of obliteration and its rate to complete fusion.
Although RME has been recognized as a safe, reliable orthopedic procedure that allows
elimination of the maxillary transverse deficiency in growing patients, 9,50–52 there are
many studies that have investigated the unwanted effects of expansion on periodontal
tissues, sutures, and the dentition. 9,51,53–55 With an increase in skeletal maturity and
closure of the circummaxillary sutures, the risk of these side effects increases,
necessitating surgical assistance to achieve the desired skeletal width.
The reason for the failure of RPE is because of the higher rigidity of the craniofacial
structures in patients who are skeletally mature. Therefore, SARPE procedure is used in
these patients for the management of transverse maxillary deficiency