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Reassessment of fluctuating dental asymmetry in Down syndrome.

Marcos Matabuena RodríguezPedro Diz DiosCarmen Cadarso-SuárezMarcio Diniz-FreitasMercedes Outumuro RialMaria Teresa Abeleira PazosJacobo Limeres Posse
Published in: Scientific reports (2017)
Fluctuating dental asymmetry (FDA) is a tool to measure developmental stability that could be increased in gonosomal aneuploidies. The aim of this study was to quantify FDA in individuals with Down syndrome (DS). The study group comprised 40 individuals with DS, and a control group matched for age and sex was created. The target teeth were the maxillary central incisors (11,21), maxillary lateral incisors (12,22), maxillary canines (13,23), and maxillary first molars (16,26). Dental morphometric variables measured on CBCT images included tooth length, crown height, root length, mesio-distal diameter, crown-to-root ratio, vestibular-palatine diameter, mid mesio-distal diameter, mid buccal-palatal diameter, maximum buccal-palatal diameter, and cervical circumference. The FA2 fluctuating asymmetry index (Palmer and Strobeck, 1986) was applied. Some discrepancies in crown-to-root ratios and root length asymmetry were significantly lower in the DS individuals than in controls. Combining the crown-to-root ratio of tooth 11 versus 21, tooth 12 versus 22, and tooth 13 versus 23, we developed a predictive model with a discriminatory power between DS and controls of 0.983. Some dental morphometric variables may actually be more stable in DS individuals than in the general population. This offers a new perspective on the relationship between canalization, fluctuating asymmetry, and aneuploidy.
Keyphrases
  • cone beam computed tomography
  • optic nerve
  • oral health
  • body mass index
  • minimally invasive
  • deep learning
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • convolutional neural network
  • computed tomography
  • hearing loss