A practical treatise on the technics and principles of dental orthopedia and prosthetic correction of cleft palate . hed to both the labial andlingual surfaces of the bands. This enables one to govern the amount of move-ment. If irritation to the tissues is caused by the unnecessary length of the bars,they are easily bent in a distal direction which is equivalent to shortening fork attached to the occluso-proximal border of one of the bands will pre-vent the teeth from overlapping when they come into contact. Fig. 263 shows the common resultsof a bodily movement of the incisorsto clos
A practical treatise on the technics and principles of dental orthopedia and prosthetic correction of cleft palate . hed to both the labial andlingual surfaces of the bands. This enables one to govern the amount of move-ment. If irritation to the tissues is caused by the unnecessary length of the bars,they are easily bent in a distal direction which is equivalent to shortening fork attached to the occluso-proximal border of one of the bands will pre-vent the teeth from overlapping when they come into contact. Fig. 263 shows the common resultsof a bodily movement of the incisorsto close the space of an extractedtooth. Fig. 264, illustrated by the drawing,is that of a case in practice, shown inFig. 265 which was made from thedental casts of a patient thirty-fiveyears of age, whose lower incisorswere affected with pyorrhea and withdecided gingival and alveolar absorp-tion, and resulted in the necessaryloss of the two centrals. The space was closed with the apparatus, as shown,and the disease was completely eradicated, and terminated in a most satisfactoryrestoration of the surrounding Fig. 265.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookidpracticaltre, bookyear1921