1.A Rehabilitation of Missing Maxillary Anterior Teeth in a Severe Skeletal Class III Malocclusion Patient Requiring Implants
Zethy Hanum Mohamed Kassim ; Abdul Latif Abdul Hamid ; Nadhirah Ghazali ; Puvanendran Balasingham
Annals of Dentistry 2021;28(1):8-14
Management of traumatic dental injuries (TDI) in a young patient may range from simple to complex. In a
situation where teeth are lost, a reliable and conservative treatment option is an implant-supported fixed
dental prosthesis (i-FDP), as this treatment option negates the need to prepare sound abutment teeth as in
the case of conventional fixed bridges. However, the placement of implants is usually prosthetically driven to
allow for a 3D functional and aesthetic restoration. In the presence of severe skeletal Class III malocclusion,
treatment may incorporate pre-surgical orthodontic treatment, followed by jaw surgery to correct the skeletal
discrepancies and finally post-surgical orthodontic treatment before the rehabilitation with implants. A
multidisciplinary treatment approach in a stepwise manner is required to address the patient’s overall
treatment needs. This case report presents a joint prosthodontics, orthodontics and oral maxillofacial surgical
management of a young adult male patient with a Skeletal Class III malocclusion who required rehabilitation
of avulsed missing anterior teeth sustained from childhood TDI. The severity of the skeletal relationship
required a Le Fort I maxillary advancement and a bilateral sagittal split osteotomy for the setback of the
mandible in combination with orthodontics for correction of malocclusion and arch relationship prior to
implant placement. Correction of the malocclusion and jaw deformity allowed the functional and aesthetic
rehabilitation of the missing teeth using an i-FDP.
2.The Perspective of Dental Aesthetics in Finding a Job as a Dentist: A Cross-Sectional Study
Tong Wah Lim ; Ahmad Hashridz Ruslan ; Nor Syahila Ahmad ; Zethy Hanum Mohamed Kassim ; Noraina Hafizan Norman
Archives of Orofacial Sciences 2022;17(2):225-236
ABSTRACT
This study aimed to determine the influence of dental aesthetics in finding a job as a dentist and the
employer’s willingness to interact in personal and professional setting. Ten dental students’ smiling
photographs were taken prior to the correction of their dental aesthetic problems. The images were digitally
altered to an ideal smile. Two different questionnaires were prepared (Groups A and B) with the images
with or without alteration (ideal and non-ideal smile). The images with an ideal smile and non-ideal smile
were randomly allocated in each group and assessed by 84 private dental practitioners who has the authority
of hiring another dentist in their practice. Four questions were asked on the likelihood of being hired,
friendliness, intelligence, and good clinical skills. In general, the students with ideal smile were more likely
to be hired (p < 0.05) except for those presented with buccally erupted canine and mild median diastema.
Students with ideal smile scored higher in terms of friendliness and intelligence than the non-ideal smile.
Most of them did not correlate a smile to an individual’s clinical skills and manual dexterity (p > 0.05).
In conclusion, individuals with an ideal smile was graded more friendly and intelligent thus increases the
employer’s willingness to interact personally and is more likely to be hired in contrast to a person with a
non-ideal smile. Therefore, an aesthetically pleasing smile is one of the factors affecting the chances of a
dentist to be hired and improve their personal interaction with people.
Esthetics, Dental--psychology