The document discusses normal occlusion from the perspectives of the Indian Dental Academy. It defines key concepts such as normal occlusion, ideal occlusion, and Andrews' six keys to normal occlusion. Normal occlusion is described as a range that can vary between individuals while still being functional. Ideal occlusion is a theoretical standard. Andrews' six keys to normal occlusion are established based on studies of non-orthodontic individuals and include relationships between molars, crown angulation, inclination, lack of rotations, tight contacts, and a flat occlusal plane.
Dental tissues and their replacements/ oral surgery courses
Normal occlusion 1 /certified fixed orthodontic courses by Indian dental academy
1. INDIAN DENTAL ACADEMY
Leader in continuing dental education
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NORMAL OCCLUSION
Department of Orthodontics &
Dentofacial Orthopedics
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2. INTRODUCTION :
• The study and practice of most branches
of dentistry should be based on a strong
foundation of knowledge of occlusion.
• The orthodontist should know what
constitutes normal occlusion in order to be
able to recognize abnormal occlusion.
• Normal in physiology is always a range,
never a point.
• A balanced, stable, healthy and
esthetically attractive occlusion is also
conceivable normal even if minor rotation
are present.
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3. • And yet, what may be abnormal for one
age may be normal for another.
• The curve of spee, compensatory
curve, cusp height and facial relation of
each tooth to its antagonist and other
characteristics of occlusion may all vary
within a broad range and still be normal.
• It may be equally normal for one child to
have a marked overbite and overjet and
procumbent incisors and for another to
have little overbite or overjet.
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4. • Good examples of the time-linked nature of
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normally are such transient malocclusion, as
crowding during, eruption of incisors, the ‘ugly
duckling’ flaring of maxillary lateral incisors, the
Class II first molar relationship tendencies before
loss of second deciduous molars.
Original concept of occlusion were those of a
complete act – literally an anatomic approach, a
description of how the teeth meet when the jaws
are closed.
“clusion” means closing and “oc” means up thus
“occlusion” is closing up.
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5. • DEVELOPMENT OF CONCEPT OF
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OCCLUSION
The development of the idea of occlusion
can be traced through fiction and hypothesis to
fact.
The fictional approach, in a philosophical sense,
was convenient arrangement of series of
observed and thoughts more or, less logically
arrange.
The hypothetical attack on the problem of
occlusion was based on a provisional
acceptance of certain logical entities. As Simon
said, a hypothesis can be maintained only if it
does not contradict the facts of experience. This
is just the opposite of fiction.
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Fact is reality, what has really happened.
Fact is a truth known by actual experience or
observation. Both the functional and hypothetical
approaches are necessary preludes to the
establishment fact but must given way wherever
contradiction arises.
The development of concept of occlusion thus
can be divided into three periods:
The fictional period, prior to 1900, the
hypothetical period, from 1900 to 1930, the
factual period, from 1930 to the present
development of concept of occlusion
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7. • DEFINITIONS
• Occlusion
Is defined as the anatomic alignment of teeth and
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their relationship to the rest of the masticatory system.
BSSO in 1926 defined occlusion as the
relationship of the teeth in the maxilla and mandible
when the jaws are closed and the condyles are at rest
in the glenoid fossae.
Normal occlusion
This refers to an occlusion that deviates in one or
more ways from ideal yet it is well adopted to that
particular environment, is esthetic and shows no
pathologic manifestations or dysfunction.
BSSO (1926) has defined normal occlusion as
the occlusion which is within the standard deviation
from the ideal.
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8. • Ideal occlusion
It is a preconceived theoretical concept of
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occlusal structural and functional relationships
that includes idealized principles and
characteristics that an occlusion should have.
BSSO (1926) has defined ideal occlusion
as ‘a hypothetical standard of occlusion based
on morphology of the teeth.
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9. • COMPENSATORCURVE
S OF THE DENTAL
ARCHES
1) Curve
of spee
• It refers to the anteroposterior curvature of the
occlusal Surfaces, beginning
at the tip of the mandibular
cuspid and following the
buccal cusps of bicuspid and
molar continuing as an arc
through the condyle. If the
curve is extended, it would
form a circle of about 4 inch
diameter. This curvature is
within the sagittal plane only.
• The curve of spee given by
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F. Graf Von Spee in
10. 2) Curve of Wilson
This is a curve that
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contacts the buccal and
lingual cusp tips of
mandibular buccal
teeth. The curve of Wilson
is medio-lateral on each
side of the arch. It results
from inward inclination of
the lower posterior teeth.
• Curve of Wilson helps in
two ways.
1. Teeth are aligned parallel to
the direction of medial
pterygoid for optimum
resistance to masticatory
forces.
2. The elevated buccal cusps
prevent food from going
past the occlusal table.
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11. 3) Curve of Monson
Manson (1920) , at a
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later date, connected the curve
of spee and curve of
Wilson to all cusps and
incisal edges, and
suggested that the
mandibular arch adopted
itself to the curved
segment of a sphere of a
4 inch radius.
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12. • POSITION OF TEETH IN THE DENTAL
ARCH
1) Contact point
• The point of contact of teeth should be situated
at their greatest mesio-distal diameter.
2) Anteroposterior position
• The posterior teeth normally in contact with each
other mesiodistally
• The anterior teeth should have their incisal
edges along a smooth curve. This is usually the
case for the lower incisors because of their
relative equal size.
• The maxillary lateral and central incisors
however, do not have the same labiolingual
thickness, which causes the lateral incisors
edges to be slightly lingual to those of central.
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13. • The canines serve as a corner stones between the anterior
and posterior. They are slightly more buccal than first
bicuspids and the lateral incisors. This is more accentuated
in the maxillary arch than in the mandibular arch
3) Vertical position
The tips of cusps of all the teeth are situated
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approximately on a segment of a sphere, the centre of which
is located about 10mm above the crista galli in the cranial
base. i.e. the curve of spee. In attritional dentition, when
reduction is confined to the cusp, the same curve is
maintained
4) Axial inclination
The long axis of maxillary molars and bicuspids tends to
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meet in the area of crista galli. The maxillary central and
lateral incisors are move inclined than the buccal teeth.
Their long axis convergent apically. The long axis of canine
fallows lateral walls of nose.
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14. • The axis of mandibular posterior teeth are
relatively parallel antero-posteriorly and
divergent apically in the transverse direction.
This means that the apices are farther apart than
the buccal cusps. The axis of canines are
convergent apically in the transverse direction,
as are the axis of lower incisors, which in turn
are inclined labially, relative to the buccal teeth.
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15. • ANDREWS SIX KEYS TO NORMAL
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OCCLUSION
- Andrews gathered data from 1960 to
1964 of non-orthodontic normal models.
Key I – Molar relationship
the distal surface of distobuccal cusp of upper
first permanent molar occluded with the mesial
surface of the mesiobuccal cusp of the lower
second molar.
The closure the distal surface of buccal surface
of distobuccal cusp of upper first permanent
molar approaches the mesial surfaces of the MB cusp of lower second molar, the better the
opportunity for normal occlusion.
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16. • Key II Crown angulation (Tip)
The gingival portion of the long axis of
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the all crowns was more distal than the
incisal portion.
The degree of crown tip is the angle
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between the long axis of crown and a line
bearing 90˚ from the occlusal plane.
• It varied with each tooth type, but within
each type tip patterns was consistent from
individual to individual.
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17. • Key III Crown inclination
• crown inclination refers to the labiolingual or buccolingual
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inclination of long axis of the crown, not to the inclination of
long axis of entire tooth.
Crown inclination is expressed in plus or minus degrees. A
plus reading is given if the gingival portion of the crown is
lingual to the incisal portion. A minus reading is recorded
when the gingival portion of the crown is labial to the incisal
portion.
a) Anterior crown inclination:
properly inclined anterior crowns contribute to normal
overbite and posterior occlusion, when too straight-up and
down they lose their functional hormony and overeruption
results. Inclination should be positive in this categary of
teeth.
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18. • b)Posterior crown inclination (upper) :A
minus crown inclination should exist in
each crown from the upper canine through
the upper second premolar . A slightly
more negative crown inclination exists in
the upper first and second molars.
• c) posterior crown inclination (lower): A
progressively greater minus crown
inclination exists from the lower canine
through lower second molar.
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19. • Key IV – Rotations
The fourth key to normal occlusion is that the teeth
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should be free of undesirable rotations.
Key V – Tight contacts
The fifth key is that the contact points should be tight
(no spaces).
Key VI – Occlusal plane or curve of spee
The planus of occlusion found on normal models
ranged crown flat to slight curves of Spee.
Even though not all of the non-orthodontic normal had
flat planes of occlusion, flat plane should be a treatment
goal as a form of over-treatment. There is a natural
tendency for curve of Spee to deepen with time.
Intercuspation of teeth is best when the plane of
occlusion is relatively flat.
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20. Thank you
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