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Intermediaries/connectors

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We shall see in Chapter 4 and again in Chapters 6 and 7 that there are important periodontal advantages to be gained by full closure of the surgical flap at the end of the visit at which the surgical exposure is performed [15]. The impacted tooth will have been re‐covered by the surgical flap and will be lost from sight, unless the impacted tooth is fairly superficially placed. The only manner in which contact may be maintained with it is through some form of physical connection, such as a ligature wire, gold chain or elastic thread, which was attached to the eyelet before or immediately after it was bonded to the tooth. These may be termed intermediaries or connectors.

Since elastic thread can only be tied once, it is not recommended to be used as an intermediary. Gold chain has found a surprising degree of acclaim and acceptance worldwide because it is undoubtedly suitable and sufficiently strong to serve as an intermediary. However, it is unnecessarily sophisticated, expensive and not widely available. There is also one practical drawback to its use, which relates to its physical properties. If a closed surgical approach is used after bonding of its attachment base to a tooth, the end of the chain will need to be held in locking tweezers or artery forceps until it is ligated to its active traction element, be it a spring or elastic thread. If the gold chain is not thus held, then the fine‐linked chain may collapse down and slip between the recently sutured edges of the flaps and be lost from sight. This may also happen when an open surgical approach is performed, where the collapsed chain may fall between the wound edges and into the cervical area of the newly exposed tooth. Indeed, this entire unfortunate series of events may also occur during later visits for re‐ligation of the still only partially erupted tooth. In all the above cases, the subsequent search for the lost chain is very uncomfortable for the patient and may even require reopening of the healing soft tissue cover.

The use of a stainless steel ligature is far easier from every point of view. It is cheap, abundant and readily at hand in every orthodontic and surgical operatory. The ligature is passed through the eyelet and twisted into a long braid with an artery forceps before bonding is undertaken. The braided wire, or pigtail, hangs loosely in the eyelet until bonding and suturing have been completed. It should be of sufficient substance for it to be rolled up into a loop, which will not easily be unravelled by extrusive forces. On the other hand, it must not be so thick that the effort needed to twist the braid or bend into a hook will seriously test the bond strength of the newly placed attachment. In practice, the use of a soft stainless steel ligature wire of 0.012 in. or 0.014 in. gauge is generally the most suitable.

A popular and simple modification of the stainless steel ligature recommends that the pigtail be braided in such a way that each two or three turns of the braid is followed by a small loop, then two or three more turns, another loop and so on. In this way, the braid comprises a convenient chain of loops, which may be shortened as necessary by cutting off the excess, while exploiting the loop closest to the gingival tissue [16]. However, as the tooth progresses, ‘rolling up’ the terminal loop of a merely twisted stainless steel ligature (Figure 2.5) is simple and eminently ‘user‐friendly’.


Fig. 2.5 A direct tie using a very short length of elastic thread.

Orthodontic Treatment of Impacted Teeth

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