Clear Aligners: Between Evolution and Efficiency—A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- Clear aligner appliances
- Orthodontic appliance, removable
- 1 OR 2 OR
- Tooth movement
- Biomechanics
- Attachments
- Divots
- Mini-screws
- Elastics
- Auxiliaries
- OR 4 OR 5 OR 6 OR 7 OR 8 OR 9 OR 10
- 3 AND 11
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Name | Manufacturer | Material | Introduction | Daily/Weekly Wearing Time | Indications | Contraindications | Attachments | Divots | Gingival Margin Design | Auxiliaries | Studies |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AirNivol | AirNivol | PU * or PET-G ** | 2010 | 22 h/14 days | Diastema, crowding, class II and III, deep bite, open bite, crossbite, preprosthetic and presurgical orthodontics | None | Yes | Yes | straight at the gingival zenith | Yes | 3 |
ALL IN | Micerium S.p.A. | PET-G | 2010 | 22 h/14 days | Diastema, crowding, open bite, cross bite, intrusion, extrusion, class I, II, III malocclusions | None | Yes | No | scalloped | 1 | |
ArcAngel | Network Gruppo Dextra | PET-G | 2011 | 22 h/14 days | Diastema, crowding, rotation, intrusion/extrusion, orthodontic relapse | Class II and III need a surgical approach, severe cross bite, excessive buccal/lingual | Yes | No | scalloped | No | 1 |
Clear Aligner | Scheu Dental | PET-G | 2013 | 17 h/14 days | Diastema, crowding, rotation, torque control, orthodontic relapse | No patient compliance | Yes | Yes | straight 2 mm up the gingival zenith | Yes | 10 |
Dair | Orthovit Devices | PU or PET-G | 2010 | 23 h/14 days | Diastema, rotation, crowding | Severe malocclusion or periodontal problems | Yes | No | straight at the gingival zenith | No | 0 |
Dental Stealth | Function Research srl | PU or PET-G | 2008 | 22 h/15 days | Diastema, crowding, intrusion/extrusion, deep bite/open bite | None | Yes | No | scalloped | No | 0 |
Effect Aligners | Orthofan | PET-G and PE *** | 1998 | 22 h/14 days | Class I, II, III malocclusions, diastema, crowding, rotation, deep bite, open bite, asymmetry | No patient compliance or bad hygiene | Yes | No | scalloped | No | 0 |
F22 | Sweden & Martina Spa | PU | 2010 | 22 h/14 days | All the malocclusions | No patient compliance | Yes | Yes | straight at the gingival zenith | Yes | 9 |
Instaligner | CP Laboratorio Ortodontico | PET-G | 2010 | 22 h/20 days | Diastema, crowding, intrusion/extrusion | TMJ **** disorders, severe skeletal problems | Yes | No | scalloped | No | 0 |
Invisalign | Align Tech | Smart Track (multilayer aromatic thermoplastic polyurethane | 1998 | 22 h/14 days | All the malocclusions | No patient compliance | Yes | No | scalloped | Yes | 110 |
Inwisible | Wilocs | PET-G | 2010 | 22 h/14 days | Diastema, crowding, rotation, intrusion/extrusion, light distal movements | Extractive cases, skeletal crossbites | Yes | No | scalloped | Yes | 0 |
Nuvola | G.E.O. srl | PU | 2006 | 20 h/10–15 days | Diastema, crowding, II Class malocclusion, cross bite, deep bite | Skeletal crossbites, severe vertical/trasversal problems | Yes | No | scalloped | Yes | 2 |
Orthocaps | Ortho Caps Gmbh | Dual layer polymer 2006 | 20 h/14 days | All the malocclusions | No patient compliance | Yes | No | scalloped | Yes | 0 | |
Smart Evolution | Ortho Evolution srl | PE | 2009 | customized | All the malocclusions including those needing transversal palatal expansion | None | Yes | No | scalloped | No | 0 |
Smile Clear | Orthodontics High Design | PET-G | 2012 | 22 h/15 days | Crowding, crossbite, deep bite, open bite, orthodontic relapse, preprosthetic orthodontics | Class III malocclusions | Yes | Yes | scalloped | Yes | 0 |
SmileLine | SmileLine | PET-G | 2009 | 22 h/10–15 days | Light and moderate malocclusions | Severe malocclusions | Yes | No | scalloped | Yes | 0 |
Smilers | Biotech Dental | PET-G | 2014 | 22 h/15 days | Diastema, crowding, occlusal problems, TMJ disorders | Periodontal problems | Yes | No | scalloped | No | 0 |
Smiletech | Ortodontica Italia srl | PU/PET-G | 1999 | 22 h/15 days | Diastema, crowding, deep bite, open bite, preparation/finalization maxillo-facial surgery | None | Yes | No | scalloped | Yes | 1 |
Sorridi | Tecnologia Dentale | PET-G | 2015 | 22 h/7 days | Crowding, class I, II and III malocclusions, surgical-orthodontic cases | No patient compliance | No | Yes | straight 2 mm up the gingival zenith | Yes | 1 |
Authors | Year | Country | Study Design | Study Size and Characteristics | Characteristic Investigated | Topic of the Study | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Weir [12] | 2017 | Australia | Narrative Review | Not Applicable | attachments/gingival margin design/auxiliaries | Clear aligners in orthodontic treatment | Primary (constitutive) features of clear aligners should guide the clinician in the choice of the different clear aligner systems available |
Hennessy et al. [14] | 2016 | Ireland | Narrative Review | Not Applicable | attachments | Clear aligners’ evolution | Clear aligners evolved in their primary features (first of all in attachment design and indications) but they cannot ever be used interchangeably to fixed labial appliances |
Lombardo et al. [15] | 2018 | Italy | Case report | 1 hyperdivergent male patient (18 years old) with a Class II malocclusion from mandibular retrusion | auxiliaries | Class II subdivision correction with clear aligners using intermaxillary elastics | Combining F22 aligners with appropriate auxiliaries is an efficacious means of resolving orthodontic issues such as class II, dental crossbite, and crowding in a time-frame comparable to that of conventional fixed orthodontics |
Liu et al. [16] | 2018 | China | Comparative/in vitro study | 5 sets of clear aligners (G0 aligners as a control group, with no activation; G1 aligners for intruding canines; G2 aligners for intruding incisors; G3 aligner for intruding canines and incisors with the same activations; G4 aligners for intruding canines and incisors with different activation) | attachments | Force changes associated with different intrusion strategies for deep-bite correction by clear aligners | With the same activation (0.2-mm intrusion) and rectangular attachments placed on premolars and first molars, canines experienced the largest intrusive force when intruded alone using G1 aligners. The canines received a larger intrusive force than incisors in G3. The incisors received similar forces in G2 and G3. First premolars endured the largest extrusive forces when all anterior teeth were intruded with G3 aligners. Extrusion forces were exerted on canines and lateral incisors when using G4 aligners |
Caruso et al. [17] | 2019 | Italy | Retrospective study | Lateral cephalometric radiographs of 10 subjects (8 females and 2 males; mean age 22.7 ± 5.3 years) with class II malocclusion treated with Invisalign and no extractions | attachments | Impact of molar teeth distalization with clear aligners on occlusal vertical dimension | Upper molar distalization with orthodontic aligners guarantees an excellent control of the vertical dimension representing an ideal solution for the treatment of hyperdivergent or openbite subjects |
Lombardo et al. [27] | 2020 | Italy | Comparative/in vitro study | 1 dental cast of a patient (class I malocclusion, no caries, no recessions, no prosthesis) | material/gingival margin design | Micro Computer Tomography X-ray comparison of aligner gap and thickness of six brands of aligners (Invisalign, Nuvola, F22, AirNivol, Arc Angel, ALL IN) | There are differences between the six aligner systems examined in terms of 2D and 3D measurements of aligner thickness and gap |
Bucci et al. [28] | 2019 | Italy | Prospective clinical study | 13 F, 5 M (28.8 ± 9.6 years) | material | Thickness of orthodontic clear aligners (AirNivol) after thermoforming and after 10 days of intraoral exposure: A prospective clinical study | Passive and active (with attachments and divots) clear aligners examined have good thickness stability after intraoral ageing |
Jindal et al. [29] | 2020 | India/UK | Comparative/in vitro study | 3 dental casts of a class I malocclusion | material | Mechanical behavior of 3D printed vs. thermoformed clear dental aligner materials under non-linear compressive loading using Field Emission Microscopy | Material and technique of clear aligner production show comparable mechanical behavior |
Porojan et al. [30] | 2020 | Romania | Comparative/in vitro study | 42 thermoformed samples from 3 thermoplastic materials for clear aligners (Biolon, Crystal, Duran) | material | Surface quality of thermoplastic materials for clear aligners after beverages and cleaning agents exposure | Biolon material has demonstrated the most constant behavior compared to Crystal and Duran |
Ihssen et al. [31] | 2019 | Germany | Comparative/in vitro study | 60 specimens of CA Clear Aligner (immersed in distilled water; subjected to accelerated ageing and used like control) | material | Effect of in vitro aging by water immersion and thermocycling on the mechanical properties of PETG aligner material | Intraoral temperature alternating to water absorption promotes a degradation of orthodontic aligners with a decrease in orthodontic forces |
Lombardo et al. [32] | 2017 | Italy | Comparative/in vitro study | 4 specimen sheets (F22 clear aligner, Duran, Erkoloc Pro, Durasoft) | material | Stress relaxation properties of four orthodontic aligner materials | Duran and F22 are more stiff than the double layer materials. F22 yielded the greatest initial stress values but also high velocity of decay. Duran presented the higher velocity of stress relaxation. Durasoft had the smallest decay. |
Alexandropoulos et al. [33] | 2015 | Greece | Comparative/in vitro study | 8 clear aligners (four thermoplastic materials: Clear Aligner, ACE, A+, Align Technology) | material | Chemical and mechanical characteristics of contemporary thermoplastic orthodontic materials | Invisalign (Align Technology) showed higher hardness and modulus values, a slightly higher brittleness and lesser creep resistance compared with the PETG-based products |
Elkholy et al. [34] | 2017 | Germany | Comparative/in vitro study | 3 mandibular clear aligners made with Duran thermoplastic material with different thicknesses (0.5, 0.625, 0.75 mm) | material | Mechanical load exerted by PET-G aligners during mesial and distal derotation of a mandibular canine | The 0.625 and 0.75 mm aligners have similar mechanical behavior. Derotation of lower canines should be limited to 10° |
Putrino et al. [35] | 2020 | Italy | Prospective study | 100 patients (57 F, 43 M, age 7–46) with fixed appliances, removable appliances, clear aligners (Invisalign, F22, Smiletech and Sorridi) | divots | The management of orthodontic therapies during the pandemic | Clear aligner treatments are the most comfortable and efficient. Clear aligners without attachments and equipped with divots and straight margin showed the best behavior |
Lombardo et al. [36] | 2018 | Italy | Case report | Female patient (23 years old) with a Class III malocclusion, transverse maxillary deficiency and bilateral crossbite | auxiliaries | Class III malocclusion and bilateral cross-bite in an adult patient treated with miniscrew-assisted rapid palatal expander and aligners | The combined therapy with a novel miniscrew-assisted rapid palatal expander and F22 aligners allowed the successful treatment of the case |
Lombardo et al. [37] | 2020 | Italy | Case report | Male patient (16 years old) with Class II malocclusion and maxillary transverse skeletal deficiency | auxiliaries | Class II subdivision with skeletal transverse maxillary deficit treated by single-sitting bone-borne appliance | The combined therapy of a bone-borne palatal expander with miniscrews and the F22 aligners allowed the successful treatment of the patient in an acceptable timeframe |
Tepedino et al. [38] | 2018 | Italy | Retrospective study | Digital models (pre-treatment, post-treatment and the digital setup) of 39 adult patients | attachments | Movement of anterior teeth (torque values) using clear aligners | No statistically significant difference was found for all the anterior teeth between predicted and achieved torque movements |
Gerard Bradley et al. [39] | 2016 | Switzerland | Comparative/in vitro study | 50 specimens obtained from 25 clear aligners (Invisalign) used for 44 ± 15 days from a patient and 25 never-used clear aligners utilized as reference | material | The mechanical and chemical properties of Invisalign appliances after use | Intraoral aging affects mechanical properties of the Invisalign appliance despite the lack of detectable chemical changes |
Tamburrino et al. [40] | 2020 | Italy | Comparative/in vitro study | Circular foils of 3 materials (Duran, Biolon, Zendura) without thermoforming, after thermoforming and after thermoforming plus storage in artificial saliva | material | Mechanical properties of thermoplastic polymers for aligner manufacturing | Elastic modulus ever increases after thermoforming except for Biolon. The tensile yield stress, also after storing in artificial saliva, increases after thermoforming for Duran and decreases for Biolon and Zendura |
Liu et al. [41] | 2016 | China | Comparative/in vitro study | 3 clear aligners from a subject manufactured by 3 companies (Invisalign-Align Technology; Angelalign-EA Medical Instruments; Smartee-Smartee Denti-Technology) | material | Color stabilities of three types of orthodontic clear aligners exposed to staining agents | The Invisalign aligners were more prone to pigmentation than the Angelalign and Smartee aligners |
Bernard et al. [42] | 2020 | Canada | Comparative/in vitro study | 300 specimens (100 per brand) from clear aligners of 3 different brands (Invisalign, Clear Correct, Minor Tooth Movement) | material | Colorimetric and spectrophotometric measurements of orthodontic thermoplastic aligners exposed to various staining sources and cleaning methods | The Invisalign aligners were more prone to pigmentation than the ClearCorrect or the Minor Tooth Movement devices after exposure to coffee or red wine. Black tea caused important stains on the surface of the three tested brands. |
Papadopoulou et al. [43] | 2019 | Switzerland | Comparative/ in vitro study | 40 Invisalign aligners with attachments used (20 for 1 week, 20 for 2 weeks) from different patients and 10 Invisalign unused aligners | material | Changes in Roughness and Mechanical Properties of Invisalign® Appliances after One- and Two-Weeks Use | Ageing has a detrimental effect on the surface roughness and mechanical properties of Invisalign appliances after 1 week of clinical usage |
Edelmann et al. [44] | 2020 | USA | Comparative/digital | 60 clear aligners 3D printed with 2 different resins (Dental LT and Grey V4) in three thicknesses (0.5, 0.75, 1 mm- 10 for each thickness value) | material | Analysis of the thickness of 3-dimensional-printed orthodontic aligners | 3D-printed aligners were thicker overall than the corresponding design file. The Dental LT aligners had the largest thickness deviation, whereas the Grey V4 without spray had the smallest. Increased thickness may deleteriously affect the clinical utility of clear aligners |
Iliadi et al. [45] | 2019 | Greece/Switzerland | Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis | 13 studies in vitro describing aligner thickness | material | Forces and moments generated by aligner-type appliances for orthodontic tooth movement: A systematic review and meta-analysis | Aligner thickness does not appear to possess a significant role in forces and moments generated by clear aligners under specific settings, while the most commonly examined tooth movements are tipping and rotation. |
Barreda et al. [46] | 2017 | Argentina | Prospective study | 10 subjects (15–50 years old) with mild or moderate upper crowding, on whose teeth 40 attachments were applied | attachments | Surface wear of resin composites used for Invisalign attachments | The alteration of the attachment surface during the first six months of treatment depends on the composite used, while attachment shape does not appear to be affected |
Costa et al. [47] | 2020 | Brazil | Comparative/digital | 3 clear aligners obtained from 3 prototypes of maxillary models (each one with a specific attachment with different geometry on the central incisor to guide extrusion) | attachments | Effect of three different attachment designs on the extrusive forces generated by thermoplastic aligners in the maxillary central incisor | The attachment geometry designed with a frontal face without edges and less protrusive, with a vestibular length of 3.32 mm, showed best distribution of forces for extrusion movement compared to the others |
Dasy et al. [48] | 2015 | USA | Comparative/ in vitro study | 12 types of aligners with different thicknesses (soft, medium, hard, and Essix ACE® for retainer) were obtained from 3 casts (two with ellipsoid and beveled attachments and one without any attachment as a control) | attachments | Effects of variable attachment shapes and aligner material on aligner retention | Ellipsoid attachments had no significant influence on the force required for aligner removal and hence on aligner retention. Essix ACE® showed significantly less retention than CA®-hard on the models with attachments. Beveled attachments were observed to increase retention significantly, compared with ellipsoid attachments and when using no attachments |
Staderini et al. [49] | 2020 | Italy | Case series | 2 patients (8 years old) with anterior crossbite (−1 mm negative overjet), Class I (into a tendency towards Class III) | attachments | Indication of clear aligners in the early treatment of anterior crossbite | Overjet and overbite were corrected in both patients in 5 months of treatment with clear aligners; bite ramp attachments are useful to correct anterior crossbite |
Weckmann et al. [50] | 2020 | Germany | Comparative/in vitro study | 2 attachments (ellipsoid and rectangular) bonded 30 times on a master dental cast with different protocols and composites | attachments | Influence of attachment bonding protocol on precision of the attachment in aligner treatments | The bonding protocol with high viscous composite without a perforation in the attachment reservoir is inaccurate. The use of a low viscous composite or attachments made by a two-phase procedure with high viscous composite revealed more precise results |
Mencattelli et al. [51] | 2015 | Italy | Comparative/in vitro study | 2 types of invisible aligners to analyze, respectively, a malocclusion with a high maxillary canine, and the effects on the axial rotation of a maxillary central incisor with and without a divot | divots | Novel universal system for 3-dimensional orthodontic force-moment measurements and its clinical use | The efficacy of using invisible aligners with a divot was validated |
Patterson et al. [52] | 2021 | USA | Prospective study | 80 adult patients (Group 1 with Class I molar malocclusions; (11 men and 29 women); 38.70 ± 15.90 years) and Group 2 with Class II molar malocclusions (11 men and 29 women; 35.25 ± 15.21 years)) under Invisalign treatment | auxiliaries | Class II malocclusion correction with Invisalign: is it possible? | The Invisalign system successfully achieves certain tooth movements but fails to achieve others predictably. No significant Class II correction or overjet reduction was observed with elastics for an average of 7-month duration in the adult population. Additional refinements may be necessary to address problems created during treatment (posterior open bite) |
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Putrino, A.; Barbato, E.; Galluccio, G. Clear Aligners: Between Evolution and Efficiency—A Scoping Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 2870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062870
Putrino A, Barbato E, Galluccio G. Clear Aligners: Between Evolution and Efficiency—A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(6):2870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062870
Chicago/Turabian StylePutrino, Alessandra, Ersilia Barbato, and Gabriella Galluccio. 2021. "Clear Aligners: Between Evolution and Efficiency—A Scoping Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 6: 2870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062870
APA StylePutrino, A., Barbato, E., & Galluccio, G. (2021). Clear Aligners: Between Evolution and Efficiency—A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(6), 2870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062870