Tanaka and Johnston analysis

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Tanaka and Johnston analysis is a mixed dentition analysis which allows one to estimate the space available in an arch for the permanent teeth to erupt. This analysis was developed by Marvin M. Tanaka and Lysle E. Johnston in 1974 after they conducted a study on 506 orthodontic patients done in Cleveland at the Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine.[1]

Technique[edit]

They believed that equations and size of the confidence intervals used by Moyer's Mixed Dentition Analysis have never been validated by any other studies. To predict the size of undererupted premolars and canines:

1/2 of Mesio-Distal width of four lower incisors + 10.5 = Estimated width of mandibular premolars + canine in one quadrant

1/2 of Mesio-Distal width of four lower incisors + 11.0 = Estimated width of maxillary premolars + canine in one quadrant

This analysis takes 3 measurements into account:

  1. The Mesiodistal widths of the mandibular incisors
  2. Predicted size of permanent canines and premolars and
  3. The space available after the incisors are correctly aligned.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Moshkelgosha, Vahid; Khosravifard, Negar; Golkari, Ali (2014-06-06). "Tooth eruption sequence and dental crowding: a case-control study". F1000Research. 3: 122. doi:10.12688/f1000research.3196.1. ISSN 2046-1402. PMC 4111114. PMID 25110582.
  2. ^ Hambire, Chaitali Umesh; Sujan, Sunanda (2015-01-01). "Evaluation of validity of Tanaka-Johnston analysis in Mumbai school children". Contemporary Clinical Dentistry. 6 (3): 337–340. doi:10.4103/0976-237X.161878. ISSN 0976-237X. PMC 4549984. PMID 26321832.