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Oral Myofunctional Pattern in Children With Anterior Open Bite
Sponsor: University Ghent
Summary
Oral myofunctional disorders (OMD) are a key, internationally acknowledged environmental factor causing dental and skeletal malocclusion. For the past 15 years, research regarding the efficacy of orofacial myofunctional therapy (OMT) to reduce OMD and to contribute to the treatment of malocclusions has been significantly increased. Despite the growing interest, high-quality evidence is still lacking because studies show a lack of standardized assessment techniques, outcome measures, and inclusion criteria, important methodological limitations such as small sample sizes, a variety of content and service delivery models and a lack of long-term follow-up. The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the effects of structured OMT on anterior open bite (AOB) in children in early or intermediate mixed dentition. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does a structured OMT program affect orofacial myofunctional patterns, dental occlusion, and oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) in children with AOB? * Are there differences in treatment outcomes between children receiving a traditional OMT program, a reduced OMT program, and a sham treatment? Participants will undergo baseline and follow-up assessments of dental occlusion, orofacial myofunctional patterns, and OHRQoL. They will follow a structured OMT protocol tailored to their assigned group and participate in weekly therapy sessions over a defined intervention period.
Official title: The OMBIT Study: Oral Myofunctional Pattern in Children With Anterior Open Bite
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
6 Years - 12 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
33
Start Date
2023-02-22
Completion Date
2026-05
Last Updated
2025-07-01
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Orofacial myofunctional therapy - traditional
Behavioral interventions, like orofacial myofunctional therapy (OMT), target brain reorganization and plasticity by establishing new motor patterns or re-establishing old ones. The aim of OMT is to correct pathological function and resting positions based on the equilibrium theory. A service model that is often used in OMT is the model provided by Garliner, which includes a 10 week OMT program with a frequency of one session of 45 minutes per week together with home practice. Treatment sessions will be used to introduce and practice new exercises, to monitor home practice and motivation of the patients. Additionally, the participant will be instructed to perform the same exercises from the treatment session at home daily. This intervention will consist of (1) creating awareness, (2) establishing nasal breathing, (3) labial seal and lip closure exercises, (4) tongue posture exercises, (5) lip and tongue strengthening, (6) practicing a physiological swallowing act.
Orofacial myofunctional therapy - reduced
Behavioral interventions, like orofacial myofunctional therapy (OMT), target brain reorganization and plasticity by establishing new motor patterns or re-establishing old ones. The aim of OMT is to correct pathological function and resting positions based on the equilibrium theory. A service model that is often used in OMT is the model provided by Garliner, which includes a 10 week OMT program with a frequency of one session of 45 minutes per week together with home practice. Treatment sessions will be used to introduce and practice new exercises, to monitor home practice and motivation of the patients. Additionally, the participant will be instructed to perform the same exercises from the treatment session at home daily. This intervention will consist of (1) creating awareness, (2) establishing nasal breathing, (3) labial seal and lip closure exercises, (4) tongue posture exercises.
Vocal warm up
The sham treatment program will include exercises from an evidence-based vocal warm up program, with exclusion of the exercises that include active involvement of the tongue or lips. Exercises that will be included are: open mouth approach, glottal fry, producing ascending and descending tones and the hand-over-mouth technique. These exercises aim to improve the dynamics of the extrinsic and intrinsic laryngeal muscles and therefore are expected not to interfere with the content of the OMT program. Furthermore, exercises regarding body posture (no focus on articulators), relaxation and voice onset will be included. This sham treatment program will be provided by the same speech-language pathologist with comparable motivation techniques as those applied in the real OMT programs.
Locations (1)
Ghent University
Ghent, Belgium