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J Am Dent Assoc, Vol 130, No 1, 85-94.
© 1999 American Dental Association | ![]() |
CLINICAL PRACTICE |
Case Description. Before the practitioner can determine the optimal treatment, he or she must consider the contributing factors. These include normal growth and development, tooth-size discrepancies, excessive incisor vertical overlap of different causes, mesiodistal and labiolingual incisor angulation, generalized spacing and pathological conditions. A carefully developed differential diagnosis allows the practitioner to choose the most effective orthodontic and/or restorative treatment.
Clinical Implications. The differential diagnosis leads to a treatment approach that most effectively addresses the patients problem. By treating the cause of the diastema, rather than just the space, the dentist enhances both the patients dental function and appearance.
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