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The acceptability of variations in smile arc and buccal corridor space
Author(s) -
Parekh S,
Fields HW,
Beck FM,
Rosenstiel SF
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
orthodontics and craniofacial research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.664
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 1601-6343
pISSN - 1601-6335
DOI - 10.1111/j.1601-6343.2007.00378.x
Subject(s) - buccal administration , population , dentistry , arc (geometry) , psychology , orthodontics , medicine , mathematics , geometry , environmental health
Structured Abstract Authors – Parekh S, Fields HW, Beck FM, Rosenstiel SF Objectives – To evaluate the esthetic acceptability range of computer‐generated variations in smile arc and buccal corridor. Design – Web‐based descriptive study using available subjects. Setting and Sample Population – The World Wide Web. Subjects for the main study included 115 lay and 131 orthodontist raters. Experimental Variables – Buccal corridors and smile arcs, each presented for a female and a male image. Buccal corridors were presented as none, ideal and excessive. The smile arc was presented as flat, ideal and excessive. The nine male and female variations, as combinations of the above variables, were each presented twice to evaluate reliability. Outcome Measure – Acceptability of buccal corridors and smile arcs using the web‐based instrument. An arbitrary super majority threshold of acceptability was set at 67% approval. Results – Both laypersons and orthodontists showed good reliability ( k ≥ 0.70). There was a broad range of acceptability, but laypersons and orthodontists showed no significant differences on the two variables tested. While orthodontists and laypersons both found smiles with excessive buccal corridors to be significantly less acceptable than those with ideal or absent buccal corridors, they were still acceptable over 70% of the time. Flat smile arcs were only acceptable 50–60% of the time, while smiles with ideal and excessive smile arcs were significantly more acceptable 84–95% of the time. When examining buccal corridors and smile arcs together, excessive buccal corridors were significantly less acceptable than ideal or absent buccal corridors regardless of the smile arc. A flat smile arc significantly reduced the acceptability of any buccal corridor to below the threshold of acceptability. Conclusions – Laypersons and orthodontists have similar preferences when acceptability of buccal corridors and smile arcs are considered. Flat smile arcs are more detrimental to smile esthetics than variations in buccal corridors. Clinicians must realize that although attractiveness may be reduced by variations in buccal corridors and smile arcs, the result may still be acceptable to a majority of people.