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Journal ArticleDOI

Does Orthodontic Treatment Affect Patients’ Quality of Life?

H. Asuman Kiyak
- 01 Aug 2008 - 
- Vol. 72, Iss: 8, pp 886-894
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TLDR
The article will emphasize the importance of clinicians' having a clear understanding, before initiating treatment, of their patients' quality of life and their expectations about improvements in specific domains ofquality of life.
Abstract
The oral-facial region is usually an area of significant concern for the individual because it draws the most attention from other people in interpersonal interactions and is the primary source of vocal, physical, and emotional communication. As a result, patients who seek orthodontic treatment are concerned with improving their appearance and social acceptance, often more than they are with improving their oral function or health. Enhancing these aspects of quality of life is an important motive for undergoing orthodontic treatment. Regardless of age, patients’ and their parents’ or caregivers’ expectations about improvements in oral function, esthetics, social acceptance, and body image are important for both general dentists and orthodontists to consider when advising patients about these procedures and during the treatment process. This review of research on the impact of conventional and surgical orthodontics on quality of life examines the association between oral health-related quality of life and severity and type of malocclusion, as well as the impact of treatment and patient characteristics on quality of life. The article will emphasize the importance of clinicians’ having a clear understanding, before initiating treatment, of their patients’ quality of life and their expectations about improvements in specific domains of quality of life.

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Factors influencing patient satisfaction with dental appearance and treatments they desire to improve aesthetics

TL;DR: Most patients in this study were not satisfied with their dental appearance with a greater percentage of females expressing dissatisfaction than males, and unhappiness with tooth color and feelings of having protruding teeth also had a significant negative influence on patient satisfaction with general dental appearance.
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Smile esthetics from the layperson's perspective.

TL;DR: The ideal and the range of acceptable values for smile variables judged by laypersons from a full-face perspective for comparison with lower-face data were quantified to produce an optimal esthetic smile.
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The impact of periodontal therapy on oral health‐related quality of life in adults: a systematic review

TL;DR: Routine non-surgical therapy can moderately improve the OHRQoL in adults with periodontal disease.
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Does psychological well-being influence oral-health-related quality of life reports in children receiving orthodontic treatment?

TL;DR: The results of this study support the postulated mediator role of PWB when evaluating OHRQOL outcomes in children undergoing orthodontic treatment, and suggest that children with low PWB can benefit from orthodentic treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Malocclusion, dental aesthetic self-perception and quality of life in a 18 to 21 year-old population: a cross section study

TL;DR: The young adults presenting severe malocclusion had a higher and independent prevalence of poorer oral aesthetic self-perception and the stepwise multivariate logistic regression analysis observed a statistically significant and independent association between maloc inclusion and poorer oral aesthetics self-Perception.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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