Evidence favoring a secular reduction in mandibular leeway space

Angle Orthod. 2017 Jul;87(4):576-582. doi: 10.2319/091416-688.1. Epub 2017 Mar 20.

Abstract

Objective: Researchers have documented secular trends in tooth size among recent generations. This study was a test for a change in mandibular leeway space.

Materials and methods: Dental casts from participants in the Denver Growth Study (23 boys, 22 girls; born in the 1930s) were compared with casts from a contemporary series of orthodontic patients (23 boys, 22 girls; born in the 1990s). All were phenotypically normal, healthy American whites.

Results: Analysis of variance (accounting for sex) showed that the cumulative mandibular primary canine plus first and second primary molar size (c + m1 + m2) was slightly larger in the recent cohort (23.53 mm earlier vs 23.83 mm recent cohort; mean difference: 0.30 mm; P = .009), principally due to larger second primary molars (m2) in the recent cohort. In turn, the sum of the permanent canine and two premolars (C + P1 + P2) was significantly larger in the recent cohort (21.08 mm earlier vs 21.80 mm recent cohort; mean difference: 0.72 mm; P = .002). Larger teeth in the contemporary series produced a mean leeway space per quadrant of 2.03 mm versus 2.45 mm in the earlier cohort-a clinically and statistically significant reduction (P = .030). Some tooth types (primary second molar and permanent canine) were significantly larger in boys than in girls, but the sex difference in leeway space was not statistically significant.

Conclusion: Results suggest that mandibular leeway space is decreasing in 21st century American whites and may present a challenge to orthodontists in managing tooth size-arch length discrepancies.

Keywords: Arch size; Environment; Leeway; Secular trend; Tooth size.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Dentition, Mixed
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Mandible
  • Models, Dental
  • Odontometry*
  • Tooth / anatomy & histology*
  • White People