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American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics 2017-Feb

Intermittent hypoxia causes mandibular growth retardation and macroglossia in growing rats.

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Jun Hosomichi
Yo-Ichiro Kuma
Shuji Oishi
Hisashi Nagai
Hideyuki Maeda
Risa Usumi-Fujita
Yasuhiro Shimizu
Sawa Kaneko
Chisa Shitano
Jun-Ichi Suzuki

Mots clés

Abstrait

BACKGROUND

In this study, we aimed to examine the role of intermittent hypoxia (IH) in dentofacial morphologic changes in growing rats.

METHODS

Seven-week-old male rats were exposed to IH at 20 cycles per hour (nadir of 4% oxygen to peak of 21% oxygen) for 8 hours per day for 6 weeks. Control rats were exposed to normoxia (N). Maxillofacial growth was compared between the 2 groups by linear measurements on cephalometric radiographs. To examine the dental arch morphology, study models and microcomputed tomography images of the jaws were taken. Additionally, tongue size was measured.

RESULTS

The gonial angle and the ramus of the mandible were smaller in the IH group than in the N group, whereas the body weights were not different between the 2 groups. Morphometric analysis of the dentition showed a significantly wider mandibular dentition and narrower maxillary dentition in the IH than in the N group. The relative width (+4.2 %) and length (tongue apex to vallate papillae, +3.5 %) of the tongue to the mandible were significantly greater in the IH group than in the N group.

CONCLUSIONS

IH induced dentofacial morphologic discrepancies in growing rats.

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