A practical treatise on the technics and principles of dental orthopedia and prosthetic correction of cleft palate . were soldered to the cuspid band with hook attachments forelastics to extend to root-wise attachments on the anchorage. To further insureand sustain a bodily movement of the cuspid, a small tube was firmly solderedto the cuspid band which telescoped into the anchorage tube with an easy slidingmovement. This is not distinctly shown on account of the position of the arch-bow passed through these tubes to engage with a distal nut. This is oneof the common methods in th
A practical treatise on the technics and principles of dental orthopedia and prosthetic correction of cleft palate . were soldered to the cuspid band with hook attachments forelastics to extend to root-wise attachments on the anchorage. To further insureand sustain a bodily movement of the cuspid, a small tube was firmly solderedto the cuspid band which telescoped into the anchorage tube with an easy slidingmovement. This is not distinctly shown on account of the position of the arch-bow passed through these tubes to engage with a distal nut. This is oneof the common methods in the authors practice, either with elastic or screw force,for closing spaces after the extraction of buccal teeth, by a bodily disto-mesialmovement of the adjoining teeth. One of the most important and effective auxiliaries in the correction of thischaracter and every form of open-bite malocclusion which demands an extrusiveand lingual movement of the lower front teeth, is the occipital force. (See Open-bite Malocclusion, Chapter XXVIII.) CHAPTER XXVIII Type G, Division 1, Class I OPEN-BITE MALOCCLUSION Fig. The above is a common facial expressionin open-bite malocclusion. Fig, 151.
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