Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 1992

Facial growth during adolescence in early, average and late maturers

DDS,
DDS,
DDS, MS, and
DDS, MS
Page Range: 185 – 190
DOI: 10.1043/0003-3219(1992)062<0185:FGDAIE>2.0.CO;2
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Abstract

The relative stage of maturity of a child may be determined by comparing the child's hand-wrist radiograph to known standards of skeletal development. Hand-wrist radiographs of 70 adolescents were used to categorize the individuals by skeletal maturation into early, average and late maturation groups using the Fishman SMA method of assessment. The rates of mandibular and maxillary growth relative to the last stages of the pubertal growth spurt were measured. Statistical evaluation of the data was performed using an analysis of variance. The magnitude of change in growth increments of the mandible was greater in the late maturers than in the early or average maturers. Incremental differences in growth between the maxilla and mandible during the last stages of puberty were noted, with the mandible growing significantly more than the maxilla.

Copyright: Edward H. Angle Society of Orthodontists

Contributor Notes

A.M. Silveira is Assistant Professor in the Department of Orthodontic, Pediatric and Geriatric Dentistry, School of Dentistry, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky

L. S. Fishman is Clinical Associate of the Graduate Department of Orthodontics Eastman Dental Center in Rochester, New York

J. D. Subtelny is Professor and Chairman, Department of Orthodontics, Eastman Dental Center, Rochester, New York

D. K. Kassebaum is Assistant Professor and Director of Oral Diagnosis and Radiology, Department of Diagnostic and Developmental Sciences at the University of Colorado School of Dentistry in Denver

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