牙面矫形术中的骨支抗与传统支抗:一项国际修正德尔菲共识研究。

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 Dentistry
Lorenzo Franchi, Maria Denisa Statie, Tommaso Clauser, Marco Migliorati, Alessandro Ugolini, Rosaria Bucci, Roberto Rongo, Riccardo Nucera, Marco Portelli, James A McNamara, Michele Nieri, Sercan Akyalcin, Fernanda Angelieri, Daniele Cantarella, Paolo Cattaneo, Lucia Cevidanes, Luca Contardo, Marie Cornelis, Renzo De Gabriele, Carlos Flores Mir, Daniela Garib, Giorgio Iodice, Antonino Lo Giudice, Luca Lombardo, Björn Ludwig, Cesare Luzi, Maria Costanza Meazzini, Peter Ngan, Tung Nguyen, Alexandra Papadopoulou, Spyridon Papageorgiou, Jae Hyun Park, Sabine Ruf, Bernardo Souki, Benedict Wilmes, Heinz Winsauer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:建立骨骼锚定与传统锚定治疗的共识:2.上颌横向缺损在生长与成人患者中的表现。2 .成长期患者下颌后缩引起的II类骨骼不和谐;生长患者的III类骨骼不和谐。方法:采用四轮修正德尔菲法。指导委员会进行了文献选择,并编制了33条陈述的清单。一个由25名正畸专家组成的国际小组同意参加会议。在每一轮中,小组成员被要求使用5分李克特量表对每个陈述的同意程度进行评分,并提供评论。达成协商一致意见的发言要么被接受,要么被重新措辞。没有达成一致意见的陈述要么被改写,要么被拒绝,要么被分成两份陈述或与另一份合并。结果:经过4轮讨论,一致意见24份,不一致意见9份。一致陈述分布如下:上颌横向缺陷:4个陈述;第II类骨骼不和谐:10个陈述;III类骨骼不和谐:10项陈述。结论:本改进的德尔菲共识研究旨在为正畸医师在不同治疗条件下选择骨支具还是常规支具提供指导。这项研究在三个关键领域产生了24项共识。虽然德尔菲法提供了有价值的专家意见,但未来的研究,包括随机对照试验,需要证实这些发现并解决剩余的不确定性。这些努力将有助于完善正畸治疗方案,提高患者的治疗效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Skeletal versus conventional anchorage in dentofacial orthopedics: an international modified Delphi consensus study.

Background: To establish consensus of skeletal anchorage versus conventional anchorage in treating: 1. Maxillary transverse deficiency in growing and adult patients, 2. Class II skeletal disharmony due to mandibular retrusion in growing patients, 3. Class III skeletal disharmony in growing patients.

Methods: A four-rounds modified Delphi method was conducted. A steering committee performed a literature selection and compiled a list of 33 statements. An international panel of 25 experts in orthodontics agreed to participate. In each round, panelists were asked to rate their level of agreement with each statement using a 5-point Likert scale and provide comments. Statements that reached consensus were either accepted or rephrased. Statements that did not reach consensus were either rephrased, rejected, or split into two statements or merged with another.

Results: After the four rounds, 24 statements achieved consensus while 9 were rejected. The distribution of consensus statements was as follows: Maxillary transverse deficiency: 4 statements; Class II skeletal disharmony: 10 statements; Class III skeletal disharmony: 10 statements.

Conclusions: This modified Delphi consensus study aimed to provide guidance for orthodontists in choosing between skeletal and conventional anchorage for various treatment conditions. The study generated 24 consensus statements across three key domains. While the Delphi method provides valuable expert opinions, future studies, including randomized controlled trials, are needed to confirm these findings and address remaining uncertainties. Such efforts will aid in refining orthodontic treatment protocols and enhancing patient outcomes.

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来源期刊
Progress in Orthodontics
Progress in Orthodontics Dentistry-Orthodontics
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
4.20%
发文量
45
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Progress in Orthodontics is a fully open access, international journal owned by the Italian Society of Orthodontics and published under the brand SpringerOpen. The Society is currently covering all publication costs so there are no article processing charges for authors. It is a premier journal of international scope that fosters orthodontic research, including both basic research and development of innovative clinical techniques, with an emphasis on the following areas: • Mechanisms to improve orthodontics • Clinical studies and control animal studies • Orthodontics and genetics, genomics • Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) control clinical trials • Efficacy of orthodontic appliances and animal models • Systematic reviews and meta analyses • Mechanisms to speed orthodontic treatment Progress in Orthodontics will consider for publication only meritorious and original contributions. These may be: • Original articles reporting the findings of clinical trials, clinically relevant basic scientific investigations, or novel therapeutic or diagnostic systems • Review articles on current topics • Articles on novel techniques and clinical tools • Articles of contemporary interest
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