Login / Signup

Force-Controlled Biomechanical Simulation of Orthodontic Tooth Movement with Torque Archwires Using HOSEA (Hexapod for Orthodontic Simulation, Evaluation and Analysis).

Ellen HaasAndreas SchmidThomas StockerAndrea WichelhausHisham Sabbagh
Published in: Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
This study aimed to investigate the dynamic behavior of different torque archwires for fixed orthodontic treatment using an automated, force-controlled biomechanical simulation system. A novel biomechanical simulation system (HOSEA) was used to simulate dynamic tooth movements and measure torque expression of four different archwire groups: 0.017″ x 0.025″ torque segmented archwires (TSA) with 30° torque bending, 0.018″ x 0.025″ TSA with 45° torque bending, 0.017″ x 0.025″ stainless steel (SS) archwires with 30° torque bending and 0.018″ x 0.025″ SS with 30° torque bending ( n = 10/group) used with 0.022″ self-ligating brackets. The Kruskal-Wallis test was used for statistical analysis ( p < 0.050). The 0.018″ x 0.025″ SS archwires produced the highest initial rotational torque moment (M y ) of -9.835 Nmm. The reduction in rotational moment per degree (M y /R y ) was significantly lower for TSA compared to SS archwires ( p < 0.001). TSA 0.018″ x 0.025″ was the only group in which all archwires induced a min. 10° rotation in the simulation. Collateral forces and moments, especially F x , F z and M x , occurred during torque application. The measured forces and moments were within a suitable range for the application of palatal root torque to incisors for the 0.018″ x 0.025″ archwires. The 0.018″ x 0.025″ TSA reliably achieved at least 10° incisal rotation without reactivation.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • finite element analysis