Title of article :
Assessment of Pain, Anxiety, and Cortisol Levels During the Initial Aligning Phase of Fixed Orthodontic Treatment
Author/Authors :
Aksoy, Alev Department of Orthodontics - Süleyman Demirel University School of Medicine - Isparta, Turkey , Karacin, Gizem Department of Orthodontics - Süleyman Demirel University School of Medicine - Isparta, Turkey , Cesur, Mine Geçgelen Department of Orthodontics - Adnan Menderes University School of Dentistry - Aydın, Turkey , Dağdeviren, Birsen Harun Department of Biochemistry - Burdur State Hospital - Burdur, Turkey , Özkaynak, Yasemin Alpağan Private Clinic - Antalya, Turkey , Gültekin, Fatih Department of Medical Biochemisrtry - Health Sciences University School of Medicine - İstanbul, Turkey
Abstract :
We assessed pain and anxiety using psychological testing instruments (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children, visual analog scale) and a physiological testing instrument (salivary cortisol hormone level) after the insertion of orthodontic appliances and during the initial alignment phase of orthodontic treatment.Methods: The study group involved two groups matched according to age and gender. Group 1 used 0.016-, 0.016×0.016-, and 0.16×0.22-inch and Group 2 used 0.014-, 0.016-, and 0.016×0.016-inch superelastic nickel-titanium archwires in the initial alignment phase of treatment. Pain and anxiety instruments were applied, and saliva samples were collected from the patients before and after molar band insertions, and bracket and initial archwire placement, and 7 days after the initial bonding and archwire replacements.Results: Cortisol levels and state anxiety scores revealed statistically significant differences within groups (p<0.01, p<0.05). No signifi-cant differences were found between Group 1 and Group 2 in cortisol hormone levels, anxiety scores, or pain measurements (p>0.05). Although not statistically significant, the most severe pain was measured in the posterior teeth after band insertion and in the anterior teeth after the first archwire insertion (p>0.05).Conclusion: Orthodontic appliances and the initial alignment phase of orthodontic treatment affect patients’ anxiety and cortisol hormone levels. Both archwires were equally effective with regard to perceived pain, anxiety, and stress hormone levels.
Keywords :
visual analogue scale , orthodontic pain , NiTi arcwires , Anxiety cortisol
Journal title :
Turkish Journal of Orthodontics