Do these 6 things and you will be successful with orthodontic maxillary expansion:

I often get questions about maxillary expansion, so I though this may help doctors. 

  1. Make sure to diagnose your patient’s case properly. Measure from skeletal and not from dental landmarks. Use the WALA measurements. Often the lower posterior segment is lingually tipped, creating a situation where you may think you need less expansion than you really do. Remember, the lower arch dictates the amount of expansion you need or can/should do. 
  2. Know your limits. Make sure that you need expansion and not SARPE. After a certain point, the palatal suture fuses and expansion requires surgery (SARPE or MARPE). 
  3. Use the proper expander to maximize skeletal expansion (Good), and to minimize dental tipping (Very Bad). If there is an anterior cross-bite also with a posterior cross-bite, bonded expanders can help because they open the bite so there is room for the anterior teeth to cross over while the posterior expansion is being completed. 
  4. If a young patient (=< CVM 3) has a retrognathic maxilla, the time of expansion can be the best way to correct the maxillary AP (anterior-posterior) with a face-mask. Of course, know your limits. After age 12 the face mask results can be unpredictable.
  5. Know, and be sure of how much expansion you need. Over expansion can be corrected more easily than under-expansion. If you miscalculate your expansion needs, you can over expand the arch so much that you will have a buccal cross-bite (scissors bite) which is very very hard to correct. A little over expansion can be allowed to relapse easily, but under expansion requires to place the expander back and continue expansion (time waster).  
  6. Retention: make sure to retain your expansion during treatment (TPA/Gosh), and after treatment (often Hawley is better vs clear overlay to hold a posterior arch and the transverse).

I hope this help with your expansion cases.

We cover the details of maxillary expansion in our Orthodontic Mini-Residency, and in our 1 day intro to Orthodontics NOA 101 courses. We hope to see you there if you need more help. 

https://nagyorthodonticacademy.com/events/

Best of luck.

More infoWe cover the details of maxillary expansion in our Orthodontic Mini-Residency, and in our 1 day intro to Orthodontics NOA 101 courses. We hope to see you there if you need more help. Click Here

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