118 OF 172 / Set 1 Copyright (c) 1999... Focus on Children's Health

118 OF 172 / Set 1 Copyright (c) 1999 Los Angeles Times 000030052
Focus on Children's Health
A Controversy With Real Teeth to It
* How early is too early for children to wear braces?
By MARNELL JAMESON, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
Los Angeles Times Monday April 5, 1999
Home Edition Health Part S Page 1 View Desk
32 inches; 1137 words
Remember when braces went hand in hand with pimples? Kids got them
at about the same awkward time.
Well, today's generation of youths destined for braces is more likely
to get them while the tooth fairy is still leaving them money. And
they'll likely get them twice.
In the jargon of dentistry, it's called "two-phase orthodontia," which
means you get dental hardware twice, once in early grade school and again
in middle school. Today as many as 80% of children go through two-phase
orthodontia, according to some estimates. Though the two-step process
costs more in time and dollars, proponents believe it achieves better
results.
But it also raises questions: Are two phases really necessary?
And--considering some kids as young as 2 are wearing dental
appliances--how early is too early for braces?
Welcome to a raging debate in orthodontia today. "Ask a roomful of
dentists and orthodontists what the best age is to start treating kids
and you'll get as many answers as you have practitioners," says Dr. Paul
Reggiardo, a Huntington Beach pediatric dentist and a trustee of the
American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry.
Some dentists and orthodontists say too many in their profession
overprescribe early orthodontia. The motivators are greed and parental
vanity, they charge.
Even those dentists, however, say that in some select cases,
repositioning jaws before permanent teeth come in is the best
alternative.
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"We're talking about two concepts here," says Dr. Donald F. Duperon,
president of the California Society of Pediatric Dentists, and professor
and chairman of pediatric dentistry at UCLA, "orthodontics and dental
facial orthopedics."
Orthodontics involves the moving and aligning of teeth; dental facial
orthopedics involves moving bones. Manipulating bones works only while
bones are growing, when you can harness that growth and use it as an ally
to create the shape you want. After kids finish puberty--usually between
13 and 15, girls on the earlier side--that window of opportunity closes.
But since you can't straighten permanent teeth before they're in, many
experts prefer to wait for the magic window--when kids are 11 or 12--to
straighten bones and teeth at once. Others say get the bones right
sooner, then come back and straighten permanent teeth later. Teens or
adults who opt for orthodontia don't have bone growth working for them so
more often need teeth pulled or jaw surgery.
Thanks to evolution, the need for orthodontia and tooth extraction is
at an all-time high. Fossil records show that human jaws are shrinking
faster than the number and size of people's teeth. As a result, more than
half the population needs orthodontia, though only 37% of those who need
braces actually get them. Who does depends heavily on household income
and demographics.
"I heard recommendations on all sides," says Julia Copeland, referring
to the opinions about orthodontia for her son, then age 9. Although all
specialists agreed he needed treatment for his overbite and crowding,
some recommended starting immediately and others said wait. "I opted to
start early because I wanted to avoid . . . what happened to me."
Copeland had braces in college and four permanent teeth pulled.
Today the American Orthodontist Assn. recommends that kids see an
orthodontist by age 7. However, "more are having treatment done at that
time than should be," says Dr. Alan Bloore, an orthodontist in private
practice in Beverly Hills. "Of the patients receiving two-phase
treatment, only about one-third actually need it."
Early Correction for Bite Problems
The wild card is jaw growth. No one can predict how much a jaw will
grow and how crowded teeth will ultimately be; the younger the patient,
the less accurate the prediction. Bite pattern problems, however, such as
overbites, under-bites and cross-bites, usually remain constant and can
be relieved with early correction.
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"Kids go through an ugly duckling phase," Bloore adds. Between the
ages of 7 and 10 permanent teeth come into developing jaws and are
usually in poor position. Instead of waiting for improvement, many
parents rush to the orthodontist. Or they see a dentist who scares them
by saying, "If you don't do this now, you'll have to remove permanent
teeth." Some get correction for problems that would have taken care of
themselves.
But, says Dr. Conrad Sack, who teaches dental orthopedics at UCLA
School of Dentistry, parents opt for two-phase treatment less out of fear
and more to gain control.
"Parents today want to be proactive, not reactive," he says.
Like Sandy McReynolds of Orange, who says, "I don't believe in putting
my kids through the discomfort of ugly teeth. Adolescence will be tough
enough."
Her oldest daughter, now 10, started wearing a dental appliance to
straighten crooked teeth when she was 7, and she's "almost done." Having
straight teeth and removable braces were also desirable, she says,
because her two daughters do television commercials.
Besides parents wanting their kids to look good and hoping to spare
them torment, another force driving the increased use of early dental
orthopedics is money.
As in any business, dental practitioners compete with one another. If
a pediatric dentist can secure a patient before the orthodontist, it's
his gain. If he waits, he may lose the business. Plus, an early start
means parents pay more money over more time. When early intervention
results in two-phases (not all do), parents can add $1,000 to $2,000 to
the cost of one-step orthodontia, which typically runs between $3,500 and
$6,000.
"Ninety-five percent of practitioners are ethical," says Duperon,
"but, as in any field, you have people just out for the money."
Studies Show No Benefit From Early Intervention
Meanwhile, Bloore notes, "nothing in the literature says we should
have fixed these problems sooner." In two separate university-based
studies comparing one-phase with two-phase treatments, researchers found
that starting appliances early in general "conferred no obvious
measurable benefit."
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Still, Sack, who is also president of the American Society of
Dentistry for Children, doesn't believe two-phase treatment is
overprescribed.
"I'm a big advocate of early intervention. When you get in and fix
problems early, you achieve a better facial aesthetic and function
sooner. You may eliminate the need for braces or reduce the time a child
needs to wear them. You often eliminate the need for extraction and
possibly surgery and wind up with better-looking faces and jaws."
Proponents of one-step treatment, however, argue that it's cheaper,
faster and works.
The children who do benefit from early intervention are those with an
extreme overbite, in which top teeth stick out so far that the children
risk chipping them, injuring themselves or being teased; a severe
under-bite, in which the top front teeth fit behind the lower teeth; or a
cross-bite, in which back teeth fit so poorly the jaw slides sideways.
Sack sometimes treats these problems when children are as young as 3
but adds that the ideal age for dental facial work is between 6 and 9.
Duperon also believes in correcting certain problems as soon as they're
found and has corrected cross-bites in kids as young as 2.
Experts do, however, agree on this: Dental orthopedics isn't something
the average dentist should do. If your family dentist wants to do dental
orthopedics, get a second opinion from a specialist.
"The general population of dentists gets only a smattering of facial
bone growth and orthodontia in school," Sack says. "Pediatric dentists,
on the other hand, get in-depth training about the facial bone growth of
kids, and orthodontists are the ultimate specialists in this area."
If you go ahead with treatment, be sure your practitioner gives you a
definite time frame and offers services at a fixed cost, not so much per
month. And don't hesitate to ask tough questions.
The real question parents need to ask, Bloore says, is this: If this
isn't done now, and I come back when my child is 10, can it still be
fixed and can it be fixed to the same degree? "Sometimes, no, it can't
wait is a valid answer. But most of the time the braces can wait."
GRAPHIC-DRAWING: (No caption / child's smiling face)
ID NUMBER: 19990405hhe0008
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Descriptors: ORTHODONTICS
DENTISTRY
DENTAL CARE
CHILDREN -- HEALTH
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