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Comparison Between Mandibular Advancement With Aligners and Twin Block in Class II Malocclusion in Growing Patients
Sponsor: University of Salamanca
Summary
To analyze mandibular advancement between the traditional Twin Block and the Angel Aligner A6 mandibular advancement clear aligners using cephalometric analysis in growing patients and a repeatable and reproducible digital measurement technique.
Official title: Analysis of the Efficacy of AngelAligner A6 Mandibular Advancer and Twin Block in the Treatment of Class II Malocclusion in Growing Patients: a Prospective Clinical Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
9 Years - 14 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
60
Start Date
2022-10-18
Completion Date
2025-07-14
Last Updated
2026-05-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
AngelAligner A6 Mandibular Advancer
Mandibular advancement with aligners is achieved using specially designed orthodontic aligners that incorporate built-in mandibular advancement features. These appliances posture the lower jaw forward in a controlled and incremental manner while simultaneously aligning the teeth. The forward positioning of the mandible helps stimulate mandibular growth in growing patients and improves the correction of Class II malocclusion by enhancing sagittal jaw relationship. Aligner replacement was performed at 10-day intervals.
Twin Block
The Twin Block is a removable functional orthodontic appliance used to correct Class II malocclusion by advancing the mandible. It consists of upper and lower acrylic plates with bite blocks that interlock at a specific angle, guiding the lower jaw forward during closure. It is most effective in growing patients to improve jaw relationship and facial profile. The Twin Block appliance, used for mandibular advancement (correction of skeletal class II), was usually worn for a period of 10 months, with a minimum of 14-16 hours per day, including night hours.
Clear aligners
Class II correction with aligners (without mandibular advancement) involves the use of clear sequential aligners to improve dental alignment and occlusion by moving teeth into a more favorable position. The correction is achieved through controlled tooth movements such as distalization, interproximal reduction, and vertical control, without actively repositioning the mandible forward.
Locations (1)
University of Salamanca
Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain