He says at the end its dental because he fixes the occlusal plane, did I misunderstand him in his solution for asymmetry being to tip the TADs of the MSE (or whatever custom made MSE-like appliance) inwards/outwards the nasal septum on one side or the other?
No, he's removing the TADs on the overexpanded side, but the arms of the appliance are still attached to the teeth on the overexpanded side. Then when he reverse-turns the appliance, the arms suck in the teeth on the overexpanded side using the remaining two TADs on the opposite side of the maxillary bone as an anchor. This maneuver is what I commented on in the video as being "my favorite" trick.
@@JawHacks still confused here. So this basically would start the tads on the overexpanded side to move back to the middle, while pulling on the molar of the under expanded side, but what is the point of that? It seems like it would do nothing for either the dropping of the overexpanded side or to match the expansion to the under expanded side. Likewise if the goal was to fix crooked teeth. Why not just go with braces or invisilne?
there is still bone borne expansion, but then the MSE is used as an orthodontic anchor. the fact that it's boneborne makes it a fantastic orthodontic anchor. Dr. Ting is best known for his clever use of the MSE to accomplish difficult orthodontic movements. IMO Dr. Yousefian's mechanism shown in this video where he removes two of the TADs is the most clever dental use of MSE i have seen.
Thank you so much Ron
Have asymmetry naturally right now without MSE, how would he fix that?
Thankyou for recommending me to dr Newaz, I'll be having the mse put in at the end of the month.
good luck with your treatment.
How much does it cost?
Does the asymmetry show up suddenly once the split happens? Or does it happen slowly pre split?
slowly
He says at the end its dental because he fixes the occlusal plane, did I misunderstand him in his solution for asymmetry being to tip the TADs of the MSE (or whatever custom made MSE-like appliance) inwards/outwards the nasal septum on one side or the other?
No, he's removing the TADs on the overexpanded side, but the arms of the appliance are still attached to the teeth on the overexpanded side.
Then when he reverse-turns the appliance, the arms suck in the teeth on the overexpanded side using the remaining two TADs on the opposite side of the maxillary bone as an anchor.
This maneuver is what I commented on in the video as being "my favorite" trick.
@@JawHacks OHHH okay, he reverse turns the TADs, very interesting
@@JawHacks still confused here. So this basically would start the tads on the overexpanded side to move back to the middle, while pulling on the molar of the under expanded side, but what is the point of that? It seems like it would do nothing for either the dropping of the overexpanded side or to match the expansion to the under expanded side. Likewise if the goal was to fix crooked teeth. Why not just go with braces or invisilne?
What if you have assymetry in your own face ? does mse make the split even more uneven?
So his device “fixes” an occlusional cant by tipping the teeth? Sounds like the opposite of what MSE is supposed to do…
there is still bone borne expansion, but then the MSE is used as an orthodontic anchor. the fact that it's boneborne makes it a fantastic orthodontic anchor.
Dr. Ting is best known for his clever use of the MSE to accomplish difficult orthodontic movements. IMO Dr. Yousefian's mechanism shown in this video where he removes two of the TADs is the most clever dental use of MSE i have seen.
What's the name of this doctor?
See description