Incisor edge-centroid relationships and overbite depth – Houston’s 1989 study

Deep bite has traditionally been explained using the interincisal angle—but is that really the most reliable predictor? Houston’s 1989 study in the European Journal of Orthodontics challenges this long-held belief and introduces a more clinically meaningful parameter: the edge–centroid relationship.

The Traditional View

For decades, orthodontists have associated increased overbite with a larger interincisal angle, especially in Class II Division 2 malocclusions. The logic is straightforward: retroclined incisors create a steep incisal guidance, promoting deeper vertical overlap.

Several studies supported this:

  • Popovich (1955): r=0.73r=0.73
  • Ludwig (1967): r=0.52r=0.52
  • Backlund (1960): r0.57r≈0.57

However, Houston highlights an important limitation: even in the best-case scenario, the interincisal angle explains less than one-third of the variation in overbite.

The New Perspective: Edge–Centroid Relationship

Houston proposes a more comprehensive variable:

  • The horizontal distance between:
    • Lower incisor edge
    • Upper incisor root centroid (midpoint of root axis)

Measured along the maxillary plane:

  • Positive: Lower incisor edge is ahead of centroid
  • Negative: Lower incisor edge is behind centroid

Key Findings

  • Strongest correlation with overbite was found in Class II Division 2 cases:
    • Interincisal angle: r=0.53r=0.53, r2=0.28r2=0.28
    • Edge–centroid relationship: r=0.78r=−0.78, r2=0.61r2=0.61
  • Once edge–centroid was accounted for:
    • Interincisal angle had no independent effect (partial r=0.01r=−0.01)

Why This Matters Clinically

The edge–centroid relationship integrates:

  • Apical base relationship (skeletal pattern)
  • Lower incisor inclination
  • Functional occlusal positioning

This makes it far more relevant for:

  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment planning
  • Stability prediction

Clinical Application

1. Class II Division 1 Cases

  • If lower incisor edge is already 1–3 mm ahead of centroid:
    • Simple upper incisor retraction may be sufficient
    • Good stability expected

2. Class II Division 2 Cases

  • Lower incisor edge typically lies posterior to centroid
  • Requires correction for stable deep bite reduction

Options:

  • Lower incisor proclination (limited stability unless growth-supported)
  • Upper incisor palatal root torque (technically demanding)
  • Combination approach (most realistic)

3. Stability Considerations

  • For extrusion-based bite opening:
    • Aim for centroid at least 2 mm behind lower incisor edge
    • Prevents relapse via incisal “slippage”
  • For intrusion-based correction:
    • Less stringent requirement, as eruption forces are better controlled

A Simple Clinical Insight

Think of it this way:

Two patients may have identical interincisal angles—but very different overbites.

Why?

Because what truly determines vertical overlap is not just how teeth are inclined, but where they are positioned relative to each other in space.

Final Takeaway

Houston’s work shifts the focus from angular measurements to spatial relationships. The edge–centroid relationship is a more powerful and clinically actionable predictor of overbite depth and its stability—especially in Class II cases.

For exam answers, remember this line:

  • Interincisal angle is a contributing factor, but edge–centroid relationship is the dominant determinant of overbite depth.

The Importance of the Level of the Lip Line and Resting Lip Pressure in Class II Division 2 Malocclusion – Lapatki BG et al., J Dent Res, 2002

Why tooth position is about balance

Tooth position is not just about bones and brackets; it is about equilibrium between internal and external forces.
The classic equilibrium theory proposes that teeth settle where forces from the tongue, lips, cheeks, and periodontal ligament balance out. Earlier work suggested that:

  • Lips and cheeks are usually more influential than the tongue for anterior tooth position.
  • Resting pressures are more important than short bursts of functional pressure (speech, swallowing, chewing)

This background is crucial when we try to explain the characteristic retroclination of upper incisors in Class II Division 2.

The Class II Division 2 puzzle

Class II Division 2 is characterized by:

  • Distal occlusion of the buccal segments
  • Retroclined maxillary central incisors, often with deep overbite

Clinicians have long suspected that these retroclined upper centrals are “held back” by unusually high lip pressure, particularly from the lower lip resting on the palatal aspect of the incisors. At the same time, family and cephalometric data indicate a strong hereditary component; therefore, many authors have referred to “local genetic factors” influencing the lips and anterior dentoalveolar region.

The missing link until Lapatki et al. (2002) was solid experimental proof that lip pressure is actually higher in Class II Division 2 than in Class I, and an explanation of why.

What this study set out to test

Lapatki and colleagues designed a study with two key objectives:

  1. Compare resting lip pressure on maxillary central incisors (incisal and cervical areas) in Class II Division 2 vs Class I.
  2. Evaluate whether a high lip line and/or increased peri‑oral muscle activity explain any increase in resting lip pressure.

In other words: Is the problem due to where the lip sits (lip line), how hard the muscles work (hypertonicity), or both?

Key findings on lip line and incisor inclination

Two simple but powerful morphologic differences were found:

  • The lip line in Class II Division 2 was, on average, around 5 mm above the incisal edge of the upper centrals, versus about 3 mm in Class I.
  • The maxillary central incisors in Class II Division 2 were retroclined by roughly 16 degrees more than in the Class I controls.

Clinically, this means that in Class II Division 2 cases, more of the incisal portion of the upper centrals lies under the lower lip at rest, and the crowns are already tipped lingually.

Resting lip pressure: what actually changes?

The pressure data are the core of the paper:

  • In Class I subjects:
    • Incisal area often experienced slightly negative or low positive pressures.
    • Cervical area typically had mild positive pressure from upper lip contact.
  • In Class II Division 2 subjects:
    • Incisal area usually had clearly positive pressure from the lower lip.
    • Cervical area frequently showed negative pressure (a kind of “suction” or reduced contact).

Notably, the magnitude of negative pressure was similar in both groups; the real difference lay in the positive incisal pressure, which was more than twice as high in the Class II Division 2 group as the positive cervical pressure seen in controls.

To reflect the real tipping effect, the authors combined incisal and cervical pressure into a weighted average (incisal pressure given more weight because it acts farther from the center of resistance). This effective “lingual tipping load” on the upper centrals was significantly higher in the Class II Division 2 group.

Is it just “strong lips”? EMG says no

Surprisingly, peri‑oral EMG did not show increased resting activity in any of the measured muscles in the Class II Division 2 group:

  • No significant inter‑group differences for orbicularis oris (upper and lower), depressor labii inferioris, or mentalis.
  • Subjects with hypertonic mentalis appeared in both groups with similar frequency.
  • Correlations between EMG activity and lip pressure or lip line were weak and not statistically significant.

So, the data do not support the idea that Class II Division 2 is driven by globally “hyperactive” peri‑oral muscles at rest. Instead, something about the geometry of the lips and teeth seems more important.

Lip line as the key driver

Correlations between lip line and pressure were strong:

  • Higher lip line → higher positive incisal pressure
  • Higher lip line → more negative or reduced cervical pressure
  • Higher lip line → greater overall lingual tipping effect (weighted pressure)

ANCOVA showed that these relationships held across both groups, and there was no significant difference in slope or intercept between Class I and Class II Division 2 when lip line was used as a covariate. In simple terms:journals.sagepub+1

  • Wherever the lip is positioned vertically, it determines how much and where pressure is applied to the crown.
  • A higher lip line means the lower lip engages more of the incisal surface of the upper centrals, boosting their lingual tipping moment.

Thus, the “local genetic factor” seems to be the vertical relationship between lip line and anterior dentoalveolar structures, not an inherently overactive lip musculature.

How does this fit with clinical Class II Division 2 patterns?

Several well‑known clinical observations become easier to explain:

  • Central incisors more retroclined than laterals/canines
    Centrals are usually more extruded and thus more deeply engaged by the lower lip. Lateral incisors and canines tend to be shorter and more labial, so they may lie outside the main zone of lip contact, escaping the full tipping effect.
  • Labially placed upper laterals or canines
    If centrals retrocline early, laterals and canines may erupt relatively labially and can be maintained labial if space is limited or they are less covered by the lower lip.
  • Mandibular rotation and soft tissue “excess”
    Counter‑clockwise mandibular rotation and infra‑occlusion of buccal segments, often described in Class II Division 2, can increase soft tissue redundancy in the lower face and contribute to a cranially displaced lip line.

The picture that emerges is one where skeletal pattern, tooth eruption, and lip line geometry interact to place the centrals in a zone of sustained, elevated resting pressure.

Clinical implications for orthodontic treatment

For clinicians, the take‑home message is pragmatic and important:

  • Class II Division 2 cases are inherently prone to relapse if the underlying lip–tooth equilibrium is not altered.
  • Simply proclining upper incisors without addressing the lip line and vertical position of the crowns may leave the lower lip still exerting a high lingual tipping force.
  • The authors conclude that intrusion combined with proper torque of the maxillary incisors should be a priority, as this can lower the effective contact of the lower lip on the incisal edges and reduce non‑physiologic resting pressure.

In other words, “stability by design” means repositioning the incisors so that their new equilibrium lies closer to a physiologic balance of lip and tongue forces, rather than continuing to fight an unchanged, unfavorable lip‑pressure environment.

The Problem of Overbite in Class II, Division 2 Malocclusion (Mills, 1973)

Overview

  • Class II Division 2 malocclusion is characterized by a deep overbite with retroclined maxillary incisors.
  • The etiology is multifactorial, involving:
    • Dental factors
    • Skeletal factors
    • Soft-tissue influences
  • Deep bite is not caused solely by retroclined upper incisors.
  • Mills (1973) evaluated 60 treated Class II Division 2 cases to determine factors influencing overbite and its stability.

Characteristic Features

  • Mild Class II skeletal pattern with considerable individual variation.
  • Markedly increased inter-incisal angle (most consistent finding).
  • Retroclined maxillary central incisors.
  • Frequently associated retroclined mandibular incisors.
  • Increased lip cover (higher lower lip line over upper incisors).
  • Reduced lower anterior facial height in many patients.
  • Deep overbite is produced by the combined effect of:
    • Increased inter-incisal angle
    • Soft-tissue pattern
    • Vertical facial proportions

Factors Influencing Overbite

  • Inter-incisal angle
    • Strongest correlation with overbite depth.
    • Greater the angle → deeper the overbite.
  • Lip cover
    • Positively correlated with overbite.
    • Increased lower lip pressure helps maintain incisor retroclination.
  • Lower anterior facial height
    • Reduced facial height contributes to deep bite.
    • Correlation weaker than inter-incisal angle.
  • Deep overbite results from the interaction of multiple factors, rather than any single variable.

Mechanism of Overbite Reduction

  • Successful correction associated with:
    • Reduction in inter-incisal angle
    • Proclination of lower incisors
    • Increase in lower facial height during growth
    • Improvement in facial proportions
  • Lower incisor proclination was more effective than upper incisor proclination.
  • Simple incisor intrusion alone showed limited long-term effectiveness.
  • Mandibular rotation contributed only in selected patients.

Clinical Implications

  • Do not treat the overbite in isolation.
  • Evaluate:
    • Inter-incisal angle
    • Lower facial height
    • Lip posture (lip cover)
    • Growth potential
  • Utilize remaining growth whenever possible.
  • Treatment mechanics should emphasize:
    • Controlled lower incisor proclination
    • Correction of incisor inclination
    • Improvement in facial proportions
  • Vertical intrusion alone is usually insufficient for stable correction.

Stability and Relapse

  • Stability depends on correcting the underlying incisor relationship.
  • Relapse is likely if:
    • Inter-incisal angle remains excessive.
    • Facial pattern remains unfavorable.
  • Stable results achieved when:
    • Lower incisal edges contact the cingulum of the upper incisors.
    • A self-retaining incisor relationship develops.
  • Growth contributes significantly to long-term stability.

Treatment Principles (Mills, 1973)

  • Class II Division 2 may represent a natural compensation for a mild skeletal Class II pattern.
  • Mild cases:
    • Preserve acceptable central incisor relationship.
    • Relieve crowding without excessive bite opening.
  • Severe growing cases:
    • Use anterior bite planes.
    • Employ staged orthodontic therapy.
    • Allow favorable repositioning of incisors under soft-tissue influence.

Key Conclusions

  • Deep overbite is multifactorial.
  • Inter-incisal angle is the strongest determinant of overbite depth.
  • Lip posture and lower facial height significantly influence the malocclusion.
  • Long-term success depends on:
    • Growth
    • Incisor reorientation
    • Favorable facial development
  • Lower incisor proclination is generally more effective than upper incisor proclination.
  • Intrusion alone provides poor long-term stability.
  • Stable correction requires establishing a self-maintaining incisor relationship.

References

  • Mills JRE. The Problem of Overbite in Class II, Division 2 Malocclusion. 1973.
  • Erik Backlund. Overbite and the Incisor Angle. 1958.
  • Arne Björk. Prediction of Mandibular Growth Rotation. 1969.
  • William J. B. Houston. Cephalometric analysis of Class II Division 2 malocclusion. 1967.
  • Kevin G. Isaacson. Overbite and Facial Height. 1970.

MARPE vs SARPE for Adult Maxillary Transverse Deficiency

MARPE vs SARPE for Adult Maxillary Transverse Deficiency

PATIENT SELECTION

MARPESARPE
Post-pubertal adolescents and adults with transverse maxillary deficiencyAdults with severe transverse deficiency requiring surgical intervention
Patients seeking a less invasive alternativePatients unsuitable for nonsurgical expansion or with failed previous expansion
Desire for greater skeletal expansion and reduced dental side effectsWhen surgical correction is already planned

APPLIANCE DESIGN

MARPE

  • Hybrid expander with 4 palatal miniscrews
  • Force delivered closer to maxillary center of resistance
  • Activation: 2/4 turn immediately, then 2/4 turn daily until correction

SARPE

  • Le Fort I subtotal osteotomy
  • Midpalatal and pterygomaxillary disjunction
  • Hyrax-type expander
  • Activation: 1/4 turn twice daily

KEY CLINICAL DIFFERENCES

Skeletal Expansion

✅ MARPE Superior

  • Greater midfacial expansion
  • Greater posterior maxillary base expansion
  • Greater nasal cavity widening
  • Greater posterior palatal expansion

Alveolar Expansion

≈ Similar between MARPE and SARPE

Dental Effects

✅ MARPE Advantage

  • Less molar tipping
  • Less premolar tipping
  • Less dentoalveolar compensation

⚠️ SARPE

  • Greater intermolar width increase
  • Greater interpremolar width increase
  • More buccal inclination of supporting teeth

EXPANSION PATTERN

MARPE

  • Parallel expansion (coronal view)
  • Parallel expansion (axial view)
  • Better posterior opening
  • More orthopedic effect

SARPE

  • Triangular opening (coronal view)
  • V-shaped opening (axial view)
  • Greater anterior than posterior expansion
  • More dentoalveolar contribution

AIRWAY EFFECTS

MARPE

  • Greater increase in nasal cavity width
  • Potentially greater improvement in nasal airflow

SARPE

  • Airway improvement present
  • Skeletal airway changes less pronounced

CLINICAL PEARLS

✓ If the goal is maximum skeletal expansion with minimal dental side effects → Choose MARPE

✓ If the patient requires surgical correction or has severe skeletal resistance → Consider SARPE

✓ MARPE provides:

  • More skeletal change
  • Better posterior expansion
  • Less tooth tipping
  • Better periodontal preservation

✓ SARPE provides:

  • Larger intermolar width gain
  • Greater dental expansion
  • More buccal tipping

TAKE-HOME MESSAGE

MARPE = More Bone, Less Tooth Movement

SARPE = More Tooth Movement, More Surgical Involvement

For most young adults with transverse maxillary deficiency, MARPE can be considered the preferred first-line option before proceeding to SARPE.

VIVA QUESTIONS ON FINISHING AND DETAILING

🔹 Basic Concepts

Q1. What is finishing in orthodontics?
Finishing is the final stage before debonding where teeth are positioned to achieve optimal stability, esthetics, function, and periodontal health.

Q2. How did McLaughlin define finishing?
Correction of previous errors, overcorrection where required, and settling of occlusion.

Q3. What is detailing?
Precise 3D positioning of individual teeth involving tip, torque, in-out, and rotational corrections.

Q4. Finishing vs detailing?
Finishing is overall occlusal optimization; detailing is individual tooth refinement.

🔹 Concepts in Finishing

Q5. What is arch-bound condition?
A situation where stiff rectangular wires prevent complete seating of teeth into ideal occlusion due to limited play.

Q6. Why is settling required?
Because rigid wires prevent complete intercuspation; settling allows final occlusal seating.

Q7. Methods of settling?

  • Light round wires + vertical elastics
  • Posterior wire removal + vertical elastics
  • Tooth positioner after debonding

🔹 Dougherty & Keys

Q8. Who proposed finishing factors and when?
Dougherty, 1976 (USC lecture series).

Q9. Mention Dougherty factors.

Think in 4 clusters:

1. Skeletal & AP

  • AP correction + overcorrection
  • Cephalometric goals
  • Profile evaluation

2. Tooth Position

  • Tip
  • Torque
  • Rotations
  • Root parallelism

3. Arch & Occlusion

  • Arch form/width
  • Interdigitation
  • Marginal ridges
  • Occlusal plane

4. Functional & Stability

  • Midlines
  • Space closure
  • TMJ function
  • Habits

Q10. What are Andrews’ six keys?

  • Interarch relationship
  • Crown angulation
  • Crown inclination
  • No rotations
  • Tight contacts
  • Curve of Spee

Q11. What is the seventh key?
Tooth size proportion (Bolton analysis, 91.3%91.3%).

🔹 ABO & Evaluation

Q12. When were ABO goals established?
June 2012.

Q13. How does ABO evaluate finishing?
Using grading of study models and panoramic radiographs.

Q14. What are radiographic goals?
Parallel roots and perpendicular to occlusal plane.

Q15. ABO model criteria?

  • Alignment
  • Marginal ridges
  • Buccolingual inclination
  • Occlusal contacts
  • Occlusal relationships
  • Overjet
  • Interproximal contacts

🔹 Overcorrection Concepts

Q16. Proffit’s view on overcorrection?
1–2 mm overcorrection to counter relapse.

Q17. Zachrisson’s recommendation?
~10% overcorrection for rotations/displacements.

Q18. McLaughlin protocol in Class II?
End-to-end overcorrection + nighttime elastics → settle to Class I.


🔹 Root & Torque Concepts

Q19. What is Raleigh Williams key?
Lower incisor apices should diverge distally; canine apex distal to crown.

Q20. What is rolling-in?
Inward inclination of mandibular posteriors affecting interdigitation.

Q21. How is rolling-in corrected?

  • Upper: Buccal root torque
  • Lower: Lingual root torque

🔹 Archform & Records

Q22. Components of arch form?

  • Anterior curvature
  • Intercanine width
  • Posterior curvature
  • Intermolar width

Q23. Pre-finishing records?

  • OPG
  • Lateral ceph
  • Photographs
  • Study models

🔹 Cephalometric Evaluation

Q24. When is pre-debonding ceph taken?
3–4 months before debonding.

Q25. What parameters are assessed?

  • Soft tissue profile
  • Incisor AP position
  • Incisor torque
  • Mandibular plane
  • Skeletal and dental corrections

🔹 Mechanics & Wires

Q26. Ideal wire for torque in finishing?
0.019×0.0250.019×0.025 TMA in 0.022 slot
0.017×0.0250.017×0.025 TMA in 0.018 slot

Q27. Why TMA?
Flexible with good torque expression.


🔹 Clinical Procedures

Q28. What is serpentine wiring?
Ligature wiring from premolar to premolar after removing archwire to aid settling.

Q29. Indications of positioner?

  • Retention
  • Minor corrections
  • Good compliance
  • Tongue habits
  • Begg finishing

Q30. Contraindication of positioner?
Deep bite.


🔹 Micro-esthetics & Surgery

Q31. Micro-esthetic procedures?

  • Gingival recontouring
  • Tooth reshaping

Q32. What is CSF (Edwards procedure)?
Circumferential supracrestal fibrotomy to prevent rotational relapse.


🔹 Rapid Fire (Exam Finishers)

Q33. Most important goal of finishing?
Stable, functional, esthetic occlusion.

Q34. Most common finishing error?
Poor root parallelism.

Q35. Key to stability?
Proper overcorrection + root positioning.

Q36. Most important ABO parameter?
Root angulation.

Begg Philosophy by Dr Manjunath – WEBINAR NOTES (Module 1)

PART 1: HISTORY & BACKGROUND

Who is Begg?

  • Raymond P. Begg — Australian orthodontist; favourite student of Edward H. Angle
  • Trained under Angle using the edgewise appliance
  • Returned to Australia → patients came from very far away → wanted to see patients once every 6 weeks → needed a simple, low-compliance, efficient appliance
  • Developed the Light Wire Differential Force Technique (also called Begg technique)
  • Worked alongside AJ Wilcock, an Australian metallurgist, who designed the high-tensile wire specifically for Begg
  • Begg was NOT a self-promoter — no marketing, worked quietly → it was Kesling who propagated his work more than Begg himself

Why Begg Broke Away from Angle

Angle’s PhilosophyBegg’s New Philosophy
Non-extraction in ALL casesExtraction when indicated
Occlusion-based treatment planningSoft tissue profile + occlusion considered
Bodily movement (edgewise)Uncontrolled tipping → then uprighting
High anchorage demand → headgearLow anchorage demand → no headgear needed
Heavy rectangular wiresLight round wires (AJ Wilcock)

Key insight: Both Begg AND Tweed (also Angle students) observed massive relapse in non-extraction cases → jaws couldn’t accommodate all teeth → independently concluded extraction was necessary


PART 2: TWO THEORIES — PHILOSOPHICAL BACKBONE

Theory 1: Theory of Attritional Occlusion

STONE AGE MAN

├── Diet: Coarse food (bones, raw meat, grain)
├── Proximal attrition → 10.56 mm reduction/arch
├── Occlusal attrition → vertical dimension decreases
└── Result: Space created for all 32 teeth including 3rd molars
→ Perfect alignment → No crowding

CIVILIZED MAN (Today)

├── Diet: Soft, refined, melt-in-mouth food
├── No proximal attrition → no space gained
├── No occlusal attrition
└── Result: Crowding → 3rd molar impaction → malocclusion
= "Disease of Civilization"
(like diabetes, hypertension)

NACF (Natural Anterior Component of Force):

  • Hereditary tendency for teeth to drift anteriorly
  • In Stone Age man: NACF + proximal attrition = accommodated 3rd molars
  • In modern man: NACF present but no attrition → crowding
  • NACF + continued eruption in absence of attrition → basis of Begg’s extraction philosophy

Begg’s quote: “When in doubt, extract” (Note: this is NOT followed in contemporary practice — we now use continuing diagnosis)

Sir’s clinical observation: Even second molars are now getting impacted — the same phenomenon Begg described is worsening generation by generation due to increasingly soft diets.


Theory 2: Theory of Differential Force (Storey & Smith)

⚠️ Exam trap: Experiment used edgewise brackets (NOT Begg brackets) and studied canine retraction ONLY (NOT entire anterior segment)

Force AppliedEffect on CanineEffect on MolarOutcome
Light (150–200g)Optimal → Frontal resorption → Steady movementSub-optimal → Does NOT move✅ Retraction + Anchorage preserved
Heavy (>200g)Supra-optimal → Hyalinization → Lag phase → Sudden dumpOptimal → Molar PROTRACTS❌ Anchorage LOST

Why this happens:

  • Ideal orthodontic force = 22–26 g/cm² of root surface area (must say “per cm²” for full marks)
  • Canine root area = small → 150–200g = OPTIMAL → frontal resorption → steady movement
  • Molar root area = large → 150–200g = SUB-OPTIMAL → no movement
  • Heavy force on canine → Hyalinization (avascular necrotic zone) → Undermining resorption (osteoclasts tunnel from adjacent bone) → Lag phase → sudden movement dump
  • Simultaneously heavy force on molar = OPTIMAL → molar protracts → anchorage LOST → “dishing in” of profile

PART 3: BEGG APPLIANCE — THREE KEY COMPONENTS

ComponentDetailsFunction
Ribbonwise bracket (inverted Angle bracket)Wire enters from gingival side, NOT occlusal sidePermits uncontrolled tipping in BOTH mesiodistal AND buccolingual planes
AJ Wilcock high-tensile wireZero stress relaxation; light force maintained for 6 weeksLight, constant, lasting force — precursor to HANT wires
Round molar tube (0.022″)Free sliding; double back bend pre-built in; two-point contact with round wireAnchorage preservation + free anterior sliding

Ribbonwise Bracket — Orientation

ANGLE'S EDGEWISE BRACKET (original):
Wire enters from OCCLUSAL side
Slot: 0.022" × 0.028" rectangular
→ Bodily movement
→ High anchorage demand

BEGG BRACKET (inverted):
Wire enters from GINGIVAL side
Wide open slot → 0.022" round wire
→ Uncontrolled tipping freely in:
├── Mesiodistal plane (crown goes distal, root mesial)
└── Buccolingual plane (crown goes labial/lingual freely)
→ Low anchorage demand ✓
→ Single point contact in both planes
→ EXCEPT for rotation: Two-point contact (wire touches base + bracket → generates couple)

Round Molar Tube — Two-Point Contact

ROUND WIRE IN ROUND TUBE:

┌───────────────────────┐
│ · · │ ← Two-point contact
└───────────────────────┘
Mesial end Distal end

Two-point contact → COUPLE formed
Couple → aims at BODILY MOVEMENT of molar
Molar does NOT tip mesially → Anchorage preserved
Simultaneously: Wire slides FREELY anteriorly
→ Canine/anterior retraction with low friction ✓

BUT: Round wire in round tube = NO buccolingual control
→ In 5-extraction cases needing B-L molar control:
→ Use DOUBLE BACK BEND in oval tube

AJ Wilcock Wire — Properties & Comparison

PropertyAJ Wilcock WireHeat-Activated NiTi (Modern)
Made byAJ Wilcock (metallurgist)Various manufacturers
MaterialHigh-tensile stainless steelNickel-titanium
Stress relaxationZeroVery low
Force at 6-week recallSame as day of placementNear same
Historical significancePrecursor to all light-force wiresModern equivalent
Recall interval6 weeks6–8 weeks

PART 4: CLASSIFICATION OF BEGG TECHNIQUE

BEGG TECHNIQUE

├── CONVENTIONAL / TRADITIONAL BEGG
│ ├── Ribbonwise bracket (original Begg bracket)
│ ├── AJ Wilcock wire
│ ├── Original 3-stage philosophy
│ └── Propagated by: Kesling, Fletcher, Viazis

├── MODIFIED BEGG
│ ├── SAME philosophy as conventional
│ ├── DIFFERENT bracket (NOT ribbonwise)
│ └── Brackets: PAGE bracket, Chun Hoon bracket

└── REFINED BEGG (Dr. VP Jayade)
├── SAME Begg ribbonwise bracket
├── SAME basic Begg tenets
├── CHANGED mechanics
├── 10° and 5° offset incorporated into molar tube
└── More emphasis on finishing

📖 Reference: Refined Begg — book by Dr. VP Jayade; Dr Manjunath Sir personally studied each page of this book with Dr. Jayade during PG training


PART 5: BEGG SYNERGISTIC ARC (Kesling — 7 Components)

#ComponentDetails
1Diagnosis & Treatment PlanningAccounts for lack of attrition; extraction justified; overcorrection planned from start
2Simultaneous movementAll teeth move at once (NOT sequential like standardized wire)
3Simultaneous overcorrectionBoth teeth AND jaws corrected simultaneously
4Light intermaxillary elastics (IME)Class II elastics used throughout treatment; light force
5Round molar tubePermits free sliding; two-point contact; anchorage friendly
6Ribbonwise bracketPermits uncontrolled tipping in B-L and M-D planes
7AJ Wilcock wireHigh-tensile; zero stress relaxation; light force

Begg separated crown-moving and root-moving forces into different stages → that’s why NO headgear, NO TPA was needed even in critical anchorage cases


PART 6: THREE STAGES OF BEGG TREATMENT

BEGG 3-STAGE TREATMENT FLOWCHART

┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ STAGE 1 │
│ ALIGNMENT & LEVELING │
│ │
│ Wire: AJ Wilcock 0.014" round │
│ Auxiliaries: Anchor bends, tip-back bends, Class II IME │
│ Pin used: STAGE 1 PIN (more play → free tipping) │
│ Wire type: MULTI-LOOP ARCH WIRE (MLAW) for crowded cases │
│ Movement: Uncontrolled tipping (alignment) │
│ Anchorage: FRIENDLY — no anchorage taxation ✓ │
│ Deep bite: Anchor bend → intrusion anteriors │
└─────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────┘


┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ STAGE 2 │
│ SPACE CLOSURE │
│ │
│ Wire: AJ Wilcock 0.016" round │
│ Auxiliaries: Class II IME, space closure springs │
│ Pin used: STAGE 2 PIN (moderate play) │
│ Movement: Uncontrolled DISTAL tipping of anterior crowns │
│ Anchorage: STILL FRIENDLY ✓ │
│ Molar tube: Wire slides back freely; two-point contact │
│ prevents mesial molar tipping │
└─────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────┘


┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ STAGE 3 │
│ TORQUING + UPRIGHTING (Root Movement) │
│ │
│ Wire: AJ Wilcock 0.020" round │
│ Auxiliaries: Torquing auxiliaries, uprighting springs │
│ (passive BRAKING springs — thick wire gauge) │
│ Pin used: STAGE 3 / HOOK PIN (minimal play → root control) │
│ Movement: Controlled ROOT movement │
│ Crowns: HELD in place by braking springs │
│ Roots: Moved lingually/distally (torquing + uprighting) │
│ ⚠️ ANCHORAGE CRITICAL HERE — root movement forces tend │
│ to move crown labially → anchorage taxation │
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

PART 7: ⭐ ANCHORAGE — CRITICAL PHASE COMPARISON (VIVA FAVOURITE)

Dr Manjunath Sir specifically called this a favourite VIVA question

ApplianceAnchorage Critical InReason
MBT / Straight WireStage 1 — AlignmentInbuilt mesial tip in all brackets (central, lateral, canine) → when full-size wire placed → mesial tipping → pulls molars mesially → anchorage loss → need TPA
BeggStage 3 — Torquing & UprightingRoot movement forces → crown tends to move labially → anchorage taxation. Stages 1 & 2 are tipping against bodily movement of posteriors → anchorage FRIENDLY

PART 8: ⭐ BRAKING MECHANICS (MAJOR SECTION — EXAM IMPORTANT)

Braking = Preventing UNWANTED tooth movement to BUILD UP ANCHORAGE in the anterior segment

Braking in the Mesiodistal Plane:

SITUATION: Applying force for PROTRACTION of posteriors
Problem: Anterior crowns want to tip DISTALLY (unwanted)

SOLUTION: Uprighting spring on anterior teeth

Crown pushed MESIALLY
Root goes distally
Crown does NOT move distally

Posteriors come forward ✓
Anteriors are held (braked) ✓

Braking in the Buccolingual Plane:

SITUATION: Force applied → Begg bracket permits free tipping
Problem: Anterior crowns want to tip LINGUALLY (unwanted)

SOLUTION: Torquing auxiliary = PALATAL ROOT TORQUE (PRT)

PRT → Labial crown torque
Crown does NOT go lingually

Anteriors held (braked) in B-L plane ✓

Braking in Contemporary Straight Wire:

ProblemSolution
Lower anterior torque in MBT = –6° = crown lingualInvert bracket → Lingual root torque → crown stays labial
Need to hold anteriors during protractionIncrease lingual root torque in 0.019 × 0.025 wire
Crown going distal during protractionV-bend (Gable bend) next to canines → anterior = anchorage unit

Key: Gable bend next to canines → moment is higher on anterior segment → aims at bodily movement → anterior = anchorage unit


PART 9: ⭐ CONTEMPORARY PROTRACTION MECHANICS

Sir explained the full sequence for posterior protraction in contemporary practice:

STEP 1: Consolidation
→ Figure-of-8 ligation from 3 to 3
→ Entire anterior root surface combined
→ Force applied on posteriors becomes SUBOPTIMAL for anteriors to move
→ Posteriors come forward, anteriors stay ✓

STEP 2: Wire Cylinderization (posterior segment)
→ Thin/round wire in posterior
→ Less friction → posteriors slide forward more easily

STEP 3: Braking Mechanics (anterior segment)
→ Uprighting springs → prevent M-D crown tipping
→ Torquing auxiliary (PRT) → prevent B-L crown tipping

STEP 4: V-bend / Gable bend
→ Place gable bend next to canines
→ Anterior segment = anchorage unit

STEP 5 (if needed): TADs
→ Additional anchorage if patient consents

Sir’s teaching: “You should be biomechanically strong. Without TADs, without headgear, you can treat critical anchorage cases with correct biomechanics alone.”


PART 10: BEGG BRACKETS — LOCK PINS (DETAILED)

The wire in the Begg bracket is held using brass lock pins, NOT ligature wires:

Pin TypeStageFeaturesPurpose
Stage 1 PinStage 1Head + Shoulder + Tail; MORE playWire doesn’t fully engage slot → free tipping + alignment; rotational correction via two-point contact
Stage 2 PinStage 2Shoulder present; moderate engagementControlled space closure with crown tipping
Stage 3 / Hook PinStage 3MINIMAL play; wire fully engagedRoot movement (torquing + uprighting); holds all corrections achieved in Stage 1 & 2

🔑 More play in pin → more tipping. Less play → more crown control → root movement.


PART 11: MULTI-LOOP ARCH WIRES (MLAW)

A unique Begg Stage 1 feature — used for severe crowding:

MLAW — MECHANISM:

Loops added into AJ Wilcock stainless steel wire

├── Increases LENGTH of wire
├── Increases FLEXIBILITY in looped segment
└── Rigid end → canine tipping/retraction
Looped end → aligns crowded anteriors simultaneously

SIMULTANEOUS ACTIONS IN STAGE 1:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 1. Space creation (distal tip of canine)│
│ 2. Alignment of crowded anteriors │
│ 3. Intrusion (deep bite correction) │
│ 4. Derotation (bends incorporated) │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘

Contemporary equivalent:
Rigid sectional wire on anchor segment +
Flexible sectional wire on crowded segment
→ Same simultaneous correction principle

PART 12: ANCHOR BEND = GABLE BEND — BIOMECHANICAL PRINCIPLE

ANCHOR BEND (Begg) = GABLE BEND (Contemporary)

Examples:
• Anchor bend closer to MOLAR → Molar = anchorage → Intrusion of anteriors
• Gable bend next to CANINE → Anterior = anchorage → Safe for protraction

PART 13: TIP EDGE — BEGG’S MODERN EQUIVALENT

  • Tip Edge Appliance by Kesling = uses Differential Straight Wire Technique
  • Same philosophy as Begg: tipping first, then uprighting
  • Tip Edge bracket = Begg tipping freedom + edgewise finishing capability in ONE bracket
  • If you cannot practice conventional Begg in your college → learn Tip Edge → same biomechanical principles

PART 14: CLINICAL CASE — RELAPSE LESSON

Sir presented a 25-year-old female, non-extraction spacing case, relapsed after 4 years with space reopening lateral to lateral:

Causes of relapse:

  1. Eruption / mesial drift of third molar → NACF → lower incisors procline → upper space reopens
  2. Bolton’s discrepancy (smaller lateral incisors) → if retracted without build-up/IPR → relapse inevitable
  3. Untreated soft tissue imbalance → profile not corrected → relapse

Retainer note: Sir does NOT give fixed retainer canine to canine (canine occlusion breaks it). Fixed retainer lateral to lateral + Hawley in upper arch.

Clinical pearl: “Always warn patients — maintain retainers until third molars have fully erupted or been extracted.”


PART 15: EXTRACTION vs. NON-EXTRACTION — CLINICAL DECISION MAKING

Sir’s clinical guidelines (from 23 years of experience):

Favour NON-ExtractionFavour EXTRACTION
Good soft tissue profileProcumbent soft tissue / poor profile
Mild space discrepancyLarge arch-tooth discrepancy
Bolton discrepancy smallLarge Bolton discrepancy
De-rotation + molar uprighting can create spaceNo residual space available
Growing patient with potential jaw growthAdult patient, jaw growth complete
Second molars not impactedSecond molars impacted / 3rd molar bud present

Bracket Prescription by Dr Tarulatha mam: WEBINAR NOTES

1. CONCEPT OF PRESCRIPTION IN ORTHODONTICS

What Is a “Prescription”?

  • The symbol Rx originates from the Eye of Horus (Egyptian mythology) — god of healing, protection, and health
  • In Latin, “recipe” = “to take”
  • As per Samuel Weinstein (Prof., University of Connecticut): “If malocclusion is a disease, orthodontic treatment is a cure. The medicine is force.”

Components of the Orthodontic Appliance

TypeExamples
ActiveArchwires (NiTi, SS), elastic chains, coil springs
PassiveBrackets, bands, tubes
  • Bracket = a passive handle used to apply forces via wire engagement
  • Materials: plastic, stainless steel, ceramic, titanium
  • The prescription (tip, torque, in-out) is built into the bracket or molar tube

2. HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF BRACKET SYSTEMS

YearAppliance/EventKey Feature
1900 (approx.)E.H. Angle — Active arch / E-archTeeth tied to arch with gold ligature wire; screw for expansion
1910Pin and Tube AppliancePin attached to tube; direction of pin guided tooth alignment
Pre-1928Ribbon Arch Appliance (Angle)First prototype of bracket; vertical slot; lacked torque and tipping control
1928Edgewise Appliance (Angle)Horizontal slot; wire inserted edge-on; major breakthrough
Post-1928Begg Bracket (modification of Ribbon Arch)Used round wires instead of rectangular; active tipping via wire deflection
Post-1928Swain’s ModificationAdded curved wings (Levy’s bracket) for rotation correction
1965Andrews’ Straight Wire ApplianceBuilt-in angulation + inclination + prominence in bracket
1970SWA came into clinical existence
1989SWA textbook published“The Straight Wire — Concept and Appliance”

Edgewise = wire inserted edge-on (the edge of the rectangular wire enters the horizontal bracket slot)

Edgewise Bracket Modifications (CME/Twin Bracket Types)

  • Extra-wide bracket
  • Intermediate bracket
  • Standard bracket
  • Junior bracket (smallest of all) — named “Sajesh Singh”

3. ANDREWS & THE 6 KEYS TO OPTIMAL OCCLUSION

Andrews studied 120 individuals with ideal untreated occlusion (1962–1972) to derive these keys:

KeyDescription
Key 1 – Molar RelationshipMB cusp of upper 1st molar in buccal groove of lower 1st molar; mesiolingual cusp of upper 1st molar in central fossa of lower 1st molar; distal ridge of upper 1st molar occludes with distal ridge of lower 2nd molar
Key 2 – Crown Angulation (Tip)Crown is mesially inclined; gingival portion of long axis is distal to crown — present in all teeth; needed for mesial component of force and masticatory efficiency
Key 3 – Crown Inclination (Torque)Crown is labially inclined in anteriors; progressively lingually inclined in posteriors; facilitates mutual protected occlusion
Key 4 – Absence of RotationNo unwanted rotations = no premature contacts, no untoward crossbites
Key 5 – Tight ContactsNo spacing; prevents tooth migration and secondary malocclusion
Key 6 – Curve of Spee (Flat)Curve of Spee ≈ flat (0–1.5 mm); deep curve → crowding; reversed curve → spacing

4. WIRE BENDING CLASSIFICATION

A. Based on Purpose

TypeDescriptionExample
Primary BendsEssential bends for alignment1st, 2nd, 3rd order bends
Secondary BendsCompensate for bracket placement errorsRepositioning bends
Tertiary BendsAuxiliary loops added to wireU-loops, helical loops, stop bends

B. Primary Bends (Orders)

OrderAlso CalledPlanePurpose
1st OrderIn-Out bend / Horizontal bend / Offset bendHorizontal (bucco-lingual)Corrects labiolingual position; accounts for in-out prominence differences (lateral incisor set-in, molar prominence)
2nd OrderTip / Artistic bend / Vertical bend / Up-down bendVertical (mesiodistal)Corrects mesiodistal crown/root angulation (tip); anchor bends, gable bends, step-up/step-down, V-bends are all 2nd order
3rd OrderTorqueLabiolingual (root movement)True torque = moves the ROOT labially or palatally; cannot be placed in round wires

Key Point: Torque strictly refers to root movement only — not crown tipping

Why Straight Wire? — The 76-Bend Problem

Without prescription brackets, a plain edgewise bracket on a full arch requires:

  • 76 total primary wire bends to passively seat the archwire
    • 46 bends for angulation, inclination, and offset
    • 33 bends for prominence and occlusal-gingival slot positioning
  • Heavy SS wire needed → excessive force delivery
  • Solution: Build all bends into the bracket → place a straight wire passively

5. ANATOMY OF THE BRACKET

PartDescription
WingsUsed for ligation; modification possible for rotation control
SlotWhere archwire engages; slot is angulated/torqued to express prescription
BaseBonded to tooth surface; can have varying stem height (for in-out)
StemConnects base to face/slot
FaceOuter surface of bracket
Identification marksDistogingival laser etch or color-coding (indicates R/L)

Level slot concept: All bracket slots across the arch should be in a single horizontal plane


6. GENERATIONS OF STRAIGHT WIRE APPLIANCE (SWA)

Generation 1: Andrews Prescription (1970)

Andrews derived values from 120 ideal occlusion cases:

Andrews Torque Values (Ideal Occlusion):

ToothTorque (°)
Max. Central Incisor+6
Max. Lateral Incisor+4
Max. Canine−7
Max. PremolarsProgressively negative
Max. MolarProgressively negative
Mand. Incisor−2
Mand. Molar−36

Rationale for torque values:

  • +6° (Central) → root centered in cortical plate; facilitates anterior guidance
  • +4° (Lateral) → slightly less due to in-out difference between central and lateral
  • −7° (Canine) → enables canine-guided occlusion; during lateral excursion, lower canine contacts palatal of upper canine, producing posterior disclusion on non-working side
  • Negative posterior torque → creates Curve of Wilson; food bolus locking mechanism for masticatory efficiency

Andrews Tip Values: +5° central, +9° lateral, +11° canine; 0° premolars and molars


Generation 2: Roth Prescription (Modification of Andrews)

Roth’s 3 Core Concepts:

  1. Reduce inventory (simplify bracket types)
  2. Build in over-correction (correct beyond ideal to compensate for relapse)
  3. Achieve functional occlusion goals (canine guidance, mutually protected occlusion)

Changes Roth Made vs. Andrews:

ToothAndrews TipRoth TipReason for Change
Max. Central Incisor+5°+5° (same)
Max. Canine+11°+13°Prevent roller-coaster effect; allow bodily movement during retraction
Max. Premolar–Molar+2° to +5°Prevent mesial movement of posteriors into extraction space (anchorage conservation) 
Mand. Canine+6°+7°Allow bodily movement
Mand. Premolar–Molar−1°Anchor preparation — built-in distal tip of posteriors resists mesial drift (like Tweed’s anchorage preparation philosophy) 

Roller-Coaster Effect:

  • During canine retraction, there is a tendency for distal tipping of the crown and mesial tipping of the root
  • This creates a “roller-coaster” arch profile
  • Roth increased canine tip to 13° to pre-correct this, so that the canine translates bodily during retraction

Roth’s Problem (Anchor Loss):

  • 13° tip expressed immediately in initial NiTi archwire → mesial movement of canine
  • This occupied extraction space prematurely (anchor loss from the start

Generation 3: MBT Prescription (McLaughlin, Bennett, Trevisi)

Key Philosophy of MBT:

  • Retract only on full-size rectangular SS wire (0.019×0.025 in 0.022 slot) to prevent roller-coaster effect mechanically
  • E-chain retraction should not begin on lighter wires

Changes MBT Made:

ParameterChange vs RothReason
Tip (Canine)ReducedPreserve anchorage from start; tip expressed gradually, not at initial arch stage
Torque (Anteriors)IncreasedAdding torque → causes tip loss (wagon wheel effect) — so extra torque compensates for this and also addresses roller-coaster effect without using high tip values
Retraction wire0.019×0.025 SS in 0.022 slotFull engagement, maximum slot fill = less play = more torque expression 

MBT for Lingually Placed Mandibular Lateral Incisor:

  • Built-in torque of −6° (lingual crown torque) in MBT for lower incisors
  • When aligning a lingually displaced lower lateral, as the crown is brought labially, the built-in torque counteracts the tendency for lingual root torque — no additional torque bending required

7. TORQUE EXPRESSION & SLOT SIZE

Slot Size Comparison

SlotAdvantagesPreferred For
0.018″More torque expression with full-size wire; less play; better for torque-sensitive casesNon-extraction cases, torque control priority
0.022″More play; works well with E-chain retraction on large wire; better sliding mechanicsExtraction cases, anchorage management

For maximum torque expression:

  • Use 0.018 slot + 0.016×0.022 SS wire (only 2° play)
  • Wire stiffness: SS > TMA for torque; TMA acceptable for 2nd order bends
  • Round wires cannot express 3rd order (torque) — must use rectangular wire

Bracket Placement Height & Torque

PlacementEffect on Root Torque
CervicalLingual root torque (less expression)
Mid-crown (ideal)Ideal torque expression
IncisalLabial root torque (more expression)

SAP (Straight Arch wire Placement) protocol: Must be very precise in bracket placement height as it directly controls torque expression


8. WAGON WHEEL CONCEPT (Andrews)

  • Torque induces tip loss in a ratio of 4:1
  • For every 4° of torque expressed → 1° of mesial tip is lost
    • 20° torque = 5° mesial tip loss
    • 40° torque = 10° mesial tip loss
    • 90° torque = 23° mesial tip loss
  • Mesial tip loss → all roots diverge → anchorage loss + tendency for spacing

Clinical implication: When using full-torque expression (e.g., MBT on SS), anchor cinch and proper retraction strategy are critical


9. ANTI-ROTATION BUILT INTO BRACKETS

During space closure with E-chain, unwanted rotations occur as side effects:

ToothE-chain Side EffectBuilt-in Anti-Rotation
CanineMesial-in, distal-outMesial-out, distal-in built into bracket
PremolarMesial-in, distal-outMesial-out, distal-in (opposite)
  • One wing is placed slightly further than the other to generate a counter-moment
  • Net rotation = zero → tooth translates bodily

10. IN-OUT (PROMINENCE) DIFFERENCE

Why different stem heights between brackets?

ToothProminenceStem Height
Max. Central IncisorMost prominentLeast stem height
Max. Lateral IncisorSet-in linguallyMore stem height added
CanineIntermediateIntermediate
Mand. 2nd PremolarSmaller than adjacentExtra offset added
MolarMore buccalOffset bend or increased stem

All brackets, when placed, should bring all slots to the same labial level (level slot)

MBT Molar Tube (Buccal Tube) Features:

  • Placed parallel to occlusal cusp → automatic 10° offset (takes care of molar in-out discrepancy)
  • Zero degree tip
  • ~14° torque built in

11. PRESCRIPTION CHOICE BY MALOCCLUSION

Malocclusion/SituationPreferred PrescriptionReason
Class II Div 1 — Critical anchorageMBTZero/reduced tip in posterior = maximum anchorage conservation
Class II — Class 2 elasticsMBTExcellent torque values; better force management
Class III — Class 3 elasticsRothBuilt-in torque assists in managing Class III dentoalveolar compensation
Crossbite (posterior)RothBetter posterior torque values counteract crossbite tendency
Scissor biteMBTBetter torque control
Non-critical anchorage extraction casesAndrews or RothBoth acceptable; add wire bends for side effects

Important caveat: Any prescription can be used for any case, but side effects must be compensated with appropriate wire bends, especially 3rd-order (torque) bends

Class II Finishing — Contralateral Molar Tube Trick

  • In Class II finishing, using a lower 2nd molar tube on the contralateral upper 1st/2nd molar provides the needed rotation for Class II molar relationship without wire bending

12. TRAMPOLINE EFFECT

  • When an active tieback is placed, the masticatory forces act on it like a trampoline
  • The bouncing (juggling) forces of mastication continuously reactivate the tieback
  • Forces are maintained for up to 3 months without patient revisit
  • Clinical significance: Active tiebacks maintain space closure forces between appointments, unlike passive tiebacks or E-chains alone

13. KEY CLINICAL TIPS FROM DR. TARULATHA

  • Torque is ONLY for root movement — never use the term for crown inclination changes alone
  • Retraction should be done on full-size rectangular SS wire (MBT philosophy) to prevent roller-coaster effect
  • Round wires cannot express 3rd order bends — always go to rectangular for torque needs
  • Bracket placement height is critical — especially in SAP protocol; even 1 mm error changes torque expression significantly
  • For torque expression: SS > TMA; use TMA only for 2nd order corrections
  • Group A anchorage cases → use MBT; avoid Roth in high-anchorage-demand cases

15. SLOT SIZE & TORQUE EXPRESSION — DETAILED NUMBERS

Play (Degrees of Freedom) by Slot & Wire Combination

Slot SizeArch WirePlay (°)Torque Expression
0.018″0.016×0.022 SS6.8°Moderate
0.018″0.018×0.025 SS1.2°Excellent
0.022″0.016×0.022 SS~19.8°Poor
0.022″0.019×0.025 SS~11.2°Better; standard for MBT retraction
0.022″0.021×0.025 SS~minimalNear-complete torque expression

Key rule: To achieve full/complete torque expression, the slot must be filled snugly → requires 0.021×0.025″ SS in 0.022 slot

Summary: For best torque expression → prefer 0.018 slot with appropriate rectangular SS wire (only 1.2° play with 0.018×0.025 SS)


16. PRESCRIPTION CHOICE FOR CLASS II DIVISION 2

  • Centrals are retroclined → roots are labially placed → need positive palatal root torque → MBT (+17°) is ideal for centrals
  • Laterals are proclined (Class II Div 2 Type 1 laterals) → need roots to go labially → Roth (+8°) preferred for laterals
  • Andrews (+7°) for centrals has less torque in comparison and may be insufficient for this caseConcept: You can mix prescriptions tooth-by-tooth within the same arch based on individual tooth requirements — this is called hybridizing or bracket prescription maneuvering

17. BRACKET PRESCRIPTION MANEUVERING — DETAILED

Using the same bracket inventory in alternative ways — inverting, switching, swapping, or substituting — to achieve a variable/customized prescription without needing custom brackets.

Types of Maneuvering

TypeDescriptionEffect on Tip/Torque
FlippingBracket is inverted (turned upside down) on the same toothChanges torque (e.g., lingual crown torque → labial root torque)
SubstitutingBracket of one tooth placed on an adjacent/different tooth (e.g., lateral incisor bracket on canine in lateral agenesis)No change in tip or torque — same values, just expressed on different tooth
SwitchingMaxillary incisor bracket transferred to mandibular incisor of same side (inter-arch, same side)Changes both tip and torque (upper vs lower tooth anatomy differs)
SwappingBracket transferred across midline within the same arch (intra-arch maneuvering)Reverses tip direction; used in Class III camouflage
BlendingCombination of switching + flippingCompound changes to tip and torque
FlockingInverting all incisor brackets of maxillary anterior segment at onceBulk torque alteration for the anterior segment

Clinical Applications of Maneuvering

Clinical SituationManeuvering UsedRationale
Lingually placed lateral incisorFlipping (inverting bracket)Converts lingual crown torque to labial crown torque to erupt lingual tooth
Lateral agenesis — canine in lateral spaceSubstituting (lateral bracket on canine)Expresses lateral incisor tip/torque on canine for aesthetic finishing
Fixed functional appliance (e.g., Forsus)MBT brackets on lower anteriorsBuilt-in lingual crown torque in MBT counteracts proclination tendency from FF appliance
Class III camouflage — retroclination of lower anteriorsSwapping (cross midline)Converts mesial tip to distal tip → root moves mesially, crown tilts distally = retroclination
Class III with fixed functional — prevent proclinationMBT lower incisor bracketsLingual torque of MBT resists labial tipping from functional forces

18. CLASS III MANAGEMENT WITH BRACKET MANEUVERING

  • In Class III camouflage, you want retroclination of lower incisors (crown distal, root mesial)
  • When you use a swapped bracket (e.g., crossing the midline — right bracket placed on left side), the built-in mesial tip of the bracket is now expressed as distal crown tip
  • Result: Lower incisor crown goes distally, root tips mesially → retroclination achieved

Similarly, in fixed functional appliance cases:

  • FF appliances generate a mesial component on lower incisors → proclination risk
  • By using MBT brackets on lower anteriors, the built-in lingual crown torque (negative torque) of MBT naturally counteracts the proclination tendency

19. TORQUE & TIP INTERACTION — ADDITIONAL NUANCE (MBT vs Roth)

  • MBT reduced tip, increased torque — rationale:
    1. Reduced tip → less anchor loss from the start (no canine mesial movement in initial arch wires)
    2. Increased torque → compensates for roller-coaster effect
    3. When torque is expressed → tip is lost (wagon wheel, 4:1 ratio); by pre-loading torque, the tip loss from torque expression itself becomes the corrective force against roller-coaster
    4. MBT mandates retraction only on 0.019×0.025 SS in 0.022 slot to ensure all these torque values are actually expressed before and during retraction

20. FLIPPING — DETAILED MECHANISM FOR LINGUALLY PLACED LATERAL INCISOR

  • Normally, MBT upper lateral has a positive torque (labial crown torque / lingual root torque)
  • For a lingually placed (palatally displaced) upper lateral incisor, if you simply engage, the wire will tip the crown labially but the root may not follow correctly
  • By inverting/flipping the lateral incisor bracket:
    • The positive torque (lingual root torque) is reversed to labial root torque
    • This drives the root labially and corrects the lingually impacted position without additional 3rd-order wire bends

RECOMMENDED READING

  • Harris Khan’s Textbook on Bracket Prescription (available on ResearchGate)
  • Mo Al-Mzani & Harris Khan articles on variable bracket prescription
  • Andrews’ original research (1972–1989) and SWA textbook (1989)

Understanding Orthodontic Bracket Prescription: From Angle’s Edgewise Appliance to Modern Straight Wire Systems

Introduction

Orthodontic brackets are much more than simple attachments bonded to teeth. They serve as the medium through which orthodontic forces are expressed, allowing controlled tooth movement and the achievement of ideal occlusion.

According to Lawrence F. Andrews and subsequent prescription developers such as Roth and McLaughlin-Bennett-Trevisi (MBT), the success of orthodontic treatment depends on incorporating specific biomechanical requirements directly into the bracket design. This concept led to the evolution of the pre-adjusted edgewise appliance, commonly known as the Straight Wire Appliance.


What is a Bracket?

A bracket is a passive orthodontic attachment bonded to the tooth surface that acts as a handle for force application.

Functions of a Bracket

  • Serves as an attachment for archwires
  • Transfers force from the archwire to the tooth
  • Guides tooth movement in three dimensions
  • Helps achieve ideal tooth alignment and occlusion

Materials Used

MaterialCharacteristics
Stainless SteelStrong, durable, most commonly used
CeramicEsthetic but brittle
PlasticEsthetic but less durable
TitaniumBiocompatible and corrosion-resistant

Historical Evolution of Orthodontic Appliances

Timeline of Development

YearApplianceDeveloperSignificance
1904E-Arch ApplianceEdward H. AngleFirst fixed appliance
1910Pin and Tube ApplianceAngleImproved tooth positioning
1915Ribbon Arch ApplianceAngleFirst bracket-like design
1928Edgewise ApplianceAngleHorizontal slot introduced
1950sBegg ApplianceP.R. BeggLight-wire technique
1970Straight Wire ApplianceLawrence F. AndrewsBuilt-in prescription system

Andrews’ Six Keys to Normal Occlusion

The foundation of modern bracket prescription is Andrews’ landmark study of untreated individuals with ideal occlusion.

Table: Andrews’ Six Keys

KeyDescription
1Correct molar relationship
2Proper crown angulation (Tip)
3Proper crown inclination (Torque)
4Absence of rotations
5Tight proximal contacts
6Flat or mild Curve of Spee

Why Was the Straight Wire Appliance Developed?

Before Andrews, orthodontists had to place numerous bends in archwires to achieve ideal tooth positioning.

Number of Bends Required in Edgewise Technique

TypeApproximate Number
Total Primary Bends76
For Tip, Torque & Offset46
For Prominence & Slot Positioning30

This process was:

  • Time consuming
  • Technique sensitive
  • Difficult to reproduce
  • Dependent on operator skill

Andrews solved this by incorporating these adjustments directly into the bracket.


Orders of Wire Bending

First Order Bends

Purpose

Correction of buccolingual position (In-Out).

Also Called

  • Horizontal bends
  • Offset bends

Examples

  • Lateral incisor offsets
  • Premolar offsets
  • Molar offsets

Second Order Bends

Purpose

Correction of mesiodistal angulation (Tip).

Also Called

  • Vertical bends
  • Artistic bends

Examples

  • Step-up bends
  • Step-down bends
  • Anchor bends
  • Gable bends

Third Order Bends

Purpose

Correction of root position (Torque).

Examples

  • Labial root torque
  • Lingual root torque
  • Palatal root torque

Summary Table

OrderMovement ControlledClinical Term
FirstBuccolingual positionIn-Out
SecondMesiodistal angulationTip
ThirdRoot inclinationTorque

Components of Bracket Prescription

Modern brackets incorporate three major prescriptions:

1. Tip

Mesiodistal angulation built into the bracket slot.

Importance

  • Produces proper tooth angulation
  • Maintains smile arc
  • Improves esthetics
  • Enhances occlusal function

2. Torque

Labiolingual root positioning built into the bracket.

Importance

  • Controls root movement
  • Maintains incisor inclination
  • Critical in extraction cases
  • Influences facial profile

3. In-Out

Controls buccolingual prominence differences between teeth.

Importance

Allows a straight archwire to align teeth of different thicknesses.


Parts of an Orthodontic Bracket

ComponentFunction
WingsLigature engagement
SlotArchwire insertion
FaceVisible surface
StemContains torque expression
BaseBonding surface
Identification MarkRight-left orientation

Tip Expression

Tip is expressed when the archwire contacts opposite corners of the bracket slot.

Factors Affecting Tip Expression

FactorEffect
Archwire stiffnessGreater stiffness = greater expression
Bracket widthWider bracket = greater moment
Archwire sizeLarger wire = more expression
Slot sizeSmaller play = greater expression

Andrews, Roth and MBT Prescriptions

Tip Philosophy

Maxillary Teeth

ToothAndrewsRothMBT
Central Incisor
Lateral Incisor
Canine11°13°

Key Observation

MBT significantly reduced anterior tip values to minimize anchorage loss and rowboat effect.


The Rowboat Effect

Definition

Anchorage loss produced by excessive built-in mesial tip, particularly in canines.

Mechanism

  1. Mesial crown movement occurs.
  2. Distal root movement follows.
  3. Reciprocal forces act on posterior teeth.
  4. Premolars and molars drift mesially.
  5. Extraction space is lost.

Clinical Consequences

  • Anchorage loss
  • Space closure difficulty
  • Deepening of bite

Prevention

MethodMechanism
LacebacksPrevent canine mesial movement
TADsProvide absolute anchorage
MBT prescriptionReduced canine tip

Roller Coaster Effect

Definition

Development of deep bite anteriorly and open bite posteriorly during space closure.

Causes

  • Excessive retraction force
  • Inadequate tip control
  • Undersized archwires

Features

RegionEffect
AnteriorDeep bite
CanineDistal tipping
PosteriorOpen bite tendency

Prevention

  • Use built-in tip prescriptions
  • Controlled force application
  • Appropriate archwire sequence

Torque Expression

Torque is primarily a root movement phenomenon.

Types of Torque

TypeRoot Movement
Positive TorqueRoot moves palatally/lingually
Negative TorqueRoot moves labially/buccally

Factors Affecting Torque Expression

FactorEffect
Wire stiffnessMore stiffness = more torque
Wire sizeLarger wire = more torque
Slot depthLess play = more torque
Slot sizeSmaller slot = more torque

Slot Size Comparison

0.018 Slot System

Advantages

  • Better torque control
  • Less play
  • Earlier expression

Disadvantages

  • Less working range

0.022 Slot System

Advantages

  • Greater flexibility
  • Larger wire sequence options
  • Easier alignment phase

Disadvantages

  • More torque play
  • Delayed torque expression

Comparison Table

Feature0.018 Slot0.022 Slot
Torque ExpressionBetterLess
PlayLessMore
Finishing ControlBetterModerate
FlexibilityLessMore

Wagon Wheel Effect

Definition

Loss of anchorage resulting from excessive torque expression.

Principle

For every 4° of torque expressed:

Approximately 1° of mesial tip is lost.

Clinical Significance

  • Increased incisor proclination
  • Anchorage loss
  • Space consumption

Influence of Bracket Positioning on Torque

Bracket height dramatically influences torque expression.

Effect of Placement

PlacementTorque Expression
GingivalReduced
Middle ThirdIdeal
IncisalIncreased

Clinical Implication

Special attention is required during bracket placement protocols because even small vertical placement errors can alter final root position significantly.


MBT vs Roth vs Andrews: Clinical Selection

Clinical SituationPreferred Prescription
Maximum Anchorage CasesMBT
Routine Extraction CasesRoth
Natural Occlusion PhilosophyAndrews
Class II Division 2MBT Anterior Torque
Cases Requiring High TorqueMBT
Cases Requiring Conservative TorqueRoth

Key Examination Pearls

  1. Andrews introduced the Straight Wire Appliance.
  2. Six Keys to Normal Occlusion form the basis of bracket prescription.
  3. First-order bends = In-Out corrections.
  4. Second-order bends = Tip corrections.
  5. Third-order bends = Torque corrections.
  6. MBT reduced tip values to reduce anchorage loss.
  7. Lacebacks help prevent Rowboat Effect.
  8. Built-in tip helps prevent Roller Coaster Effect.
  9. 0.018 slot provides superior torque expression.
  10. Torque expression depends on wire size, slot size, and wire stiffness.

Conclusion

The evolution from Angle’s edgewise appliance to Andrews’ Straight Wire Appliance revolutionized orthodontics by transferring biomechanical complexity from the archwire into the bracket itself. Modern prescriptions such as Andrews, Roth, and MBT differ primarily in their tip and torque values, allowing clinicians to select the most suitable prescription based on treatment objectives, anchorage requirements, and malocclusion characteristics.

A thorough understanding of bracket prescription, tip, torque, in-out compensation, and associated biomechanical effects such as Rowboat and Roller Coaster effects is essential for efficient and predictable orthodontic treatment.

Bioprogressive therapy as an answer to orthodontic needs: PART 1

Core idea

Bioprogressive therapy was developed to correct the limitations of conventional edgewise treatment, especially anchorage loss, unwanted incisor flaring, occlusal plane dumping, and overreliance on heavy mechanics. Ricketts emphasizes that treatment should be built around biologic force levels, cortical bone considerations, and prefabricated appliance components rather than endless chairside wire bending.

Historical progression

StageMain featureMain drawback
Primary edgewiseFully banded, custom bends, gold bands, heavy manual finishingTime-consuming, rigid, depends on full eruption, difficult finishing 
Secondary edgewiseRound wire used more often, later rectangular finishingFlaring, anchorage loss, protrusion in nonextraction cases 
Tertiary/Tweed edgewiseTip-back, extraction, headgear, stronger mechanicsMore force, more work, still risk of overrotation/occlusal plane problems 
BioprogressivePreformed bands/brackets, light forces, biologic control, better anchorageRequires thoughtful planning and case-specific customization 

Why bioprogressive emerged

The author’s main criticism of older systems is that round-wire leveling and heavy intermaxillary mechanics often caused unwanted tooth movement, especially forward tipping of lower incisors and extrusion of molars. He links these problems to cortical bone resistance and shows that orthodontic movement is not just about moving teeth through cancellous bone; the compact bone plates matter greatly

Force and biology

ConceptExam point
Light forcesFavored for biologic efficiency and reduced tissue damage 
Optimal force rangeStorey and Smith’s canine retraction work is cited as supporting 150–300 g for translatory retraction 
Pressure conceptForce should be considered relative to root surface area and tissue response 
Cortical boneLower incisors and molars behave differently because bone support differs by site 

Appliance logic

Bioprogressive therapy uses a prefabricated system with bands, brackets, and arch forms designed in advance, reducing chairside bending and standardizing control. Ricketts’ philosophy is that the appliance should do more of the work, while the clinician still retains control through selective adjustments and overtreatment where needed.

Three bioprogressive setups

SetupMain design ideaBest use
Standard bioprogressiveTorque built into upper incisors and canines; lower torque largely managed in wireGeneral cases and balanced control 
Full-torque bioprogressiveAdds lower posterior torque to the standard setupCases needing more complete torque control 
Triple-control bioprogressiveAdds step-outs/step-ins and more overtreatment of rotations and posterior segmentsCases needing maximal built-in control and less wire bending 

Bracket prescriptions

Tooth groupPrescription emphasized in the paper
Upper central incisors22 degrees root to palatal 
Upper lateral incisors14 degrees root to palatal, 8 degrees tip down distally 
Upper canines7 degrees root to palatal, 5 degrees tip down distally 
Lower canines7 degrees root to lingual, 5 degrees tip down distally 
Lower second premolars14 degrees root to buccal in full-torque and triple-control setups 
Lower first molars22 degrees root to buccal in full-torque and triple-control setups 

Rotation and step control

Ricketts treats rotation as an essential part of first-order control and provides multiple methods to overcorrect or maintain rotation without excessive archwire complexity. These include off-centering the band, squashing a bracket, reciprocal ties, and lingual cleats, showing that the system is flexible rather than purely “straight wire.”

Second molars and anchorage

Second molars are not automatically banded in every case, especially upper second molars, because they may erupt into better function later and can complicate treatment if included too early. Lower second molars, however, are usually important for anchorage and proper arch development, and the system is designed to accommodate them without full rebanding.

Viva-style one-liners

  • Bioprogressive therapy is a biologically oriented evolution of edgewise mechanics.
  • Its philosophy is light force, preformed components, and anchorage preservation.
  • Ricketts strongly emphasizes cortical bone and regional tooth behavior.
  • The system reduces chairside bending by using standardized bands, brackets, and arches.
  • Standard, full-torque, and triple-control are the three major setups described in Part I

Tooth movement after orthodontic treatment with 4 second premolar extractions

Extraction TypeIncisor Retraction (mm)Space Closure (% Anterior)Anchorage Loss (Molar Advance mm)Key Viva Point 
4 Second PremolarsMax 3.3 / Man 2.950% Max / 46% ManMax 3.2 / Man 3.4Equal anterior-posterior split; reverse Spee controls tipping.
4 First Premolars10.3 combined66.5%5.2High retraction risk; reinforces Tweed’s 1/3 rule exceeded.
Upper 1st/Lower 2nd Premolar9.3 combined56.3%7.2Moderates over-retraction in borderline cases.
4 First Molars6.3 combined31%13.9Minimal anterior pull; boosts third molar eruption (90%).
Non-Extraction1.7 Max / 0.8 Man forwardN/AMinimalBaseline for stability testing.

Mnemonic: “Second Less Pull” – Second premolars: Less incisor retraction than firsts; molars pull more via root area