
Correlation between Morphological Facial Index and Canine Relationship in Adults - An Anthropometric Study
Author(s) -
Hiamanshu Trivedi,
Aftab Azam,
Ragni Tandon,
Pratik Chandra,
Rohit Kulshrestha,
Ankit Gupta
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
dental research and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2572-6978
DOI - 10.33805/2572-6978.107
Subject(s) - calipers , anthropometry , medicine , correlation , significant difference , orthodontics , dentistry , mathematics , geometry
The aim of this study was to correlate the morphological facial index and canine relationship in adults. Materials and method: The research was conducted on 1000 subjects (563 males and 437 females), aged 18-40 years, selected randomly. The parameters were morphological facial height and facial width. The standard spreading caliper with its scale was used for the measurement of facial parameters. Canine relationship was observed intra-orally with the subjects seated on the dental chair. Result: Euryprosopic facial type (53.2%) was most common in majority of the subjects followed by Mesoprosopic (21.6%), Hypereuryprosopic (19%), Leptoprosopic (5.6%) and the least common was Hyperleptoprosopic (0.6%). The canine relation was mostly Class I in both the genders, females showed a higher value of Class II and Class III canine relation. Conclusion: The overall majority had the euryprosopic facial type and there was no significant association between facial morphologic types and canine relationship in both the genders in different age groups at either side. The canine relationship association with facial morphologic type was significant only for left side.