Objective: Wire syndrome or X-effect/twist-effect describes undesired long-term tooth movements following fixed retainer placement. Since it includes root torque changes that might cause gingival recession, those situations often require periodontal, orthodontic, and conservative treatment. The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of fixed orthodontic treatment with completely customized lingual appliances (CCLAs) and continuous archwires for a clinically significant reduction in the dimensions of labial gingival recessions in the anterior mandible, caused by wire syndrome, in a group of consecutive patients treated with the same approach. Moreover, the reduction in root prominence of the affected teeth relative to the two neighboring teeth was evaluated.
Method and materials: This retrospective cohort study from three centers included 20 consecutively recruited patients with labial gingival recession at mandibular incisors and canines due to wire syndrome. A total of 25 teeth were assessed. CCLA treatment with a standardized archwire sequence (0.012″/0.014″ NiTi, 0.016″ × 0.022″ NiTi, 0.018″ × 0.018″ beta-titanium with optional extra-torque) was identical in all three centers. Primary endpoints of recession depth, recession width, and recession surface were assessed on digital models at debonding (T1) and compared to baseline (T0) both as absolute differences (T0 − T1), and as ratios ([T0 − T1]/T0) by one-sample t tests with P .05. As a secondary endpoint, the reduction of root prominence relative to the gingival surface of the alveolar yoke of the two neighboring teeth was measured in millimeters.
Results: Treatment resulted in a significant reduction in all dimensions of gingival recession. The mean reduction in recession depth was 1.86 mm (44.9%) and in recession width 0.70 mm (35.6%). The mean recession surface was reduced from 10.77 mm2 to 3.93 mm2, indicating a mean recession surface reduction of 61.4%. All changes were statistically significant (P .001). The range of recession surface reduction was from 25.4% to 100%, and 18 out of the 25 recessions showed a reduction of more than 50%. The maximum reduction in root prominence amounted to more than 3 mm.
Conclusion: The use of CCLAs to torque roots of the anterior mandibular teeth, exposed by wire syndrome, towards the middle of the alveolar process reduces the area of subsequent labial gingival recession and reduces the root prominence of the affected teeth substantially. This is considered a critical step in optimizing the predictability of surgical recession coverage.
Schlagwörter: alveolar yoke, completely customized lingual appliances, gingival recessions, recession depth, recession width, retainer twist-effect, retainer X-effect, root coverage, root prominence, torque, wire syndrome