Experimental assessment of oral hygiene achieved by children wearing rapid palatal expanders, comparing manual and electric toothbrushes

Male Toothbrushing Palatal Expansion Technique Orthodontic Brackets Electrical Equipment and Supplies Dental Plaque Index Equipment Design Oral Hygiene Molar 3. Good health 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Humans Orthodontic Appliance Design Female Single-Blind Method Periodontal Index Child Follow-Up Studies
DOI: 10.1111/idh.12061 Publication Date: 2013-11-13T08:07:19Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractObjectivesThe aim was to compare the efficacy of the electric versus the manual toothbrush in terms of the oral hygiene achieved by patients wearing rapid palatal expanders (RPEs).MethodsForty patients were randomly divided into two groups; one equipped with a manual toothbrush (Group A), the other with an electric toothbrush (Group B). Each child's plaque index (PI) and gingival index (GI) were calculated at banded molar level at times T0 (before banding), T1 (a month later), T2 (3 months later) and T3 (when the expander was removed). At each appointment, the PI and GI were recorded and the patient was remotivated.ResultsThe level of oral hygiene achieved by the group using an electric toothbrush produced a greater improvement in the two indexes than in the group using the manual toothbrush that showed no statistically significant improvement (PI T0–T3: P = 0.309; GI T0–T3: P = 0.141). Both indexes dropped considerably in both groups from T0 to T2, but more so in the group B. From T2 to T3, although the electric toothbrush continued to be substantially more effective, Group B showed a statistically significant deterioration in the oral hygiene (PI +20%; GI +33%). Other assessments conducted on particular areas of the tooth showed improvements in the PI (−33%) for the vestibular region, and for the GI (−57%) in the palatal region among the patients in Group B, while there were no significant changes in these indexes in Group A.ConclusionsOur findings show that the electric toothbrush is statistically more efficient in performing an adequate level of oral hygiene in children wearing RPE.
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