Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.

The curved planes of the human dentition seen in the sagittal view, the mandibular curve of Spee and the maxillary compensating curve, have clinical importance to modern dentistry and potential relevance to the craniofacial evolution of hominins. However, the mechanism providing the formation of the...

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Main Authors: Steven D Marshall, Karen Kruger, Robert G Franciscus, Thomas E Southard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0221137&type=printable
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author Steven D Marshall
Karen Kruger
Robert G Franciscus
Thomas E Southard
author_facet Steven D Marshall
Karen Kruger
Robert G Franciscus
Thomas E Southard
author_sort Steven D Marshall
collection DOAJ
description The curved planes of the human dentition seen in the sagittal view, the mandibular curve of Spee and the maxillary compensating curve, have clinical importance to modern dentistry and potential relevance to the craniofacial evolution of hominins. However, the mechanism providing the formation of these curved planes is poorly understood. To explore this further, we use a simplified finite element model, consisting of maxillary and mandibular "blocks", developed to simulate tooth eruption, and forces opposing eruption, during simplified masticatory function. We test our hypothesis that curved occlusal planes develop from interplay between tooth eruption, occlusal load, and mandibular movement. Our results indicate that our simulation of rhythmic chewing movement, tooth eruption, and tooth eruption inhibition, applied concurrently, results in a transformation of the contacting maxillary and mandibular block surfaces from flat to curved. The depth of the curvature appears to be dependent on the radius length of the rotating (chewing) movement of the mandibular block. Our results suggest mandibular function and maxillo-mandibular spatial relationship may contribute to the development of human occlusal curvature.
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spelling doaj-art-665ae00ca12043188a0372b97e26ca962025-08-20T02:05:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011412e022113710.1371/journal.pone.0221137Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.Steven D MarshallKaren KrugerRobert G FranciscusThomas E SouthardThe curved planes of the human dentition seen in the sagittal view, the mandibular curve of Spee and the maxillary compensating curve, have clinical importance to modern dentistry and potential relevance to the craniofacial evolution of hominins. However, the mechanism providing the formation of these curved planes is poorly understood. To explore this further, we use a simplified finite element model, consisting of maxillary and mandibular "blocks", developed to simulate tooth eruption, and forces opposing eruption, during simplified masticatory function. We test our hypothesis that curved occlusal planes develop from interplay between tooth eruption, occlusal load, and mandibular movement. Our results indicate that our simulation of rhythmic chewing movement, tooth eruption, and tooth eruption inhibition, applied concurrently, results in a transformation of the contacting maxillary and mandibular block surfaces from flat to curved. The depth of the curvature appears to be dependent on the radius length of the rotating (chewing) movement of the mandibular block. Our results suggest mandibular function and maxillo-mandibular spatial relationship may contribute to the development of human occlusal curvature.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0221137&type=printable
spellingShingle Steven D Marshall
Karen Kruger
Robert G Franciscus
Thomas E Southard
Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.
PLoS ONE
title Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.
title_full Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.
title_fullStr Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.
title_full_unstemmed Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.
title_short Development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve: A finite element model.
title_sort development of the mandibular curve of spee and maxillary compensating curve a finite element model
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0221137&type=printable
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