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Prognathism

Prognathism, also called Habsburg chin, Habsburg's chin, Habsburg jaw or Habsburg's jaw[2][3] primarily in the context of its prevalence amongst members of the House of Habsburg,[2] is a positional relationship of the mandible or maxilla to the skeletal base where either of the jaws protrudes beyond a predetermined imaginary line in the coronal plane of the skull.[clarification needed] In general dentistry, oral and maxillofacial surgery, and orthodontics, this is assessed clinically or radiographically (cephalometrics). The word prognathism derives from Greek πρό (pro, meaning 'forward') and γνάθος (gnáthos, 'jaw'). One or more types of prognathism can result in the common condition of malocclusion, in which an individual's top teeth and lower teeth do not align properly.[citation needed]

Prognathism
Other namesHabsburg jaw
Illustration of different types
SpecialtyOrthodontics 
Types
  • Alveolar
  • Maxillary
  • Mandibular or progenism
CausesMultifactorial
TreatmentOrthodontics; oral and maxillofacial surgery
Frequency
  • Children: 0.5 to 2.0%
  • Adult: 2.0 to 4.0%[1]

Presentation edit

 
Mandibular prognathism, where teeth have almost reached their final, straight position by dental braces. This makes the prognathism more obvious, and it will take an operation, moving the jaw backwards, to give the ultimate result.

Prognathism in humans, particularly alveolar prognathism, can occur due to normal variation among phenotypes. In human populations where prognathism is not the norm, it may be a malformation, the result of injury, a disease state, a hereditary condition,[4] or, if not pathological, may simply be a minority trait within a population.[5]

Prognathism is considered a disorder only if it affects chewing, speech or social function as a byproduct of severely affected aesthetics of the face.[citation needed]

Clinical determinants include soft tissue analysis where the clinician assesses nasolabial angle, the relationship of the soft tissue portion of the chin to the nose, and the relationship between the upper and lower lips; also used is dental arch relationship assessment such as Angle's classification.[citation needed]

Cephalometric analysis is the most accurate way of determining all types of prognathism, as it includes assessments of skeletal base, occlusal plane angulation, facial height, soft tissue assessment and anterior dental angulation. Various calculations and assessments of the information in a cephalometric radiograph allow the clinician to objectively determine dental and skeletal relationships and determine a treatment plan.[citation needed]

Prognathism should not be confused with micrognathism, although combinations of both are found. It affects the middle third of the face, causing it to jut out, thereby increasing the facial area, similar to the phenotype of archaic hominids and other apes. Mandibular prognathism is a protrusion of the mandible, affecting the lower third of the face. Alveolar prognathism is a protrusion of that portion of the maxilla where the teeth are located, in the dental lining of the upper jaw.[citation needed]

Prognathism can also be used to describe ways that the maxillary and mandibular dental arches relate to one another, including malocclusion (where the upper and lower teeth do not align). When there is maxillary or alveolar prognathism which causes an alignment of the maxillary incisors significantly anterior to the lower teeth, the condition is called an overjet. When the reverse is the case, and the lower jaw extends forward beyond the upper, the condition is referred to as retrognathia (reverse overjet).[citation needed]

Classification edit

Alveolar prognathism edit

 
Alveolar prognathism, caused by thumb sucking and tongue thrusting in a seven-year-old girl.

Not all alveolar prognathism is anomalous, and significant differences can be observed among different ethnicities.[6]

Harmful habits such as thumb sucking or tongue thrusting can result in or exaggerate an alveolar prognathism, causing teeth to misalign. Functional appliances can be used in growing children to help modify bad habits and neuro-muscular function, with the aim of correcting this condition.[citation needed]

Alveolar prognathism can also easily be corrected with fixed orthodontic therapy. However, relapse is quite common, unless the cause is removed or a long-term retention is used.[citation needed]

Maxillary prognathism edit

In disease states, maxillary prognathism is associated with Cornelia de Lange syndrome;[7] however, so-called false maxillary prognathism, or more accurately, retrognathism, where there is a lack of growth of the mandible, is by far a more common condition.[citation needed]

Prognathism, if not extremely severe, can be treated in growing patients with orthodontic functional or orthopaedic appliances. In adult patients this condition can be corrected by means of a combined surgical/orthodontic treatment, where most of the time a mandibular advancement is performed. The same can be said for mandibular prognathism.[citation needed]

Mandibular prognathism (progenism) edit

 
Leopold I, showing progenism

Pathologic mandibular prognathism is a potentially disfiguring genetic disorder where the lower jaw outgrows the upper, resulting in an extended chin and a crossbite. In both humans and animals, it can be the result of inbreeding.[8] In brachycephalic or flat-faced dogs, like shih tzus and boxers, it can lead to problems such as underbite.[9]

In humans, it results in a condition sometimes called lantern jaw, reportedly derived from 15th century horn lanterns, which had convex sides.[10][a] Traits such as these were often exaggerated by inbreeding, and can be traced within specific families.[8]

Although more common than appreciated, the best known historical example is Habsburg jaw, or Habsburg or Austrian lip, due to its prevalence in members of the House of Habsburg, which can be traced in their portraits.[12] The process of portrait-mapping has provided tools for geneticists and pedigree analysis; most instances are considered polygenic,[13] but a number of researchers believe that this trait is transmitted through an autosomal recessive type of inheritance.[14][12]

Allegedly introduced into the family by a member of the Piast dynasty, it is clearly visible on family tomb sculptures in St. John's Cathedral, Warsaw. A high propensity for politically motivated intermarriage among Habsburgs meant the dynasty was virtually unparalleled in the degree of its inbreeding. Charles II of Spain, who lived 1661 to 1700, is said to have had the most pronounced case of the Habsburg jaw on record,[15] due to the high number of consanguineous marriages in the dynasty preceding his birth.[14][12]

 
Charles II of Spain showing Habsburg jaw, a severe type of mandibular prognathism.
 
Vlad III of Wallachia, showing progenism.
 
Pedro II of Brazil, showing progenism. His mother was Archduchess Maria Leopoldina of Austria, a member of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine by birth.

Treatment edit

Prior to the development of modern dentistry, there was no treatment for this condition; those who had it simply endured it. Today, the most common treatment for mandibular prognathism is a combination of orthodontics and orthognathic surgery. The orthodontics can involve braces, removal of teeth, or a mouthguard.[16]

In insects edit

In entomology, prognathous means that the mouthparts face forwards, being at the front of the head, rather than facing downwards as in some insects.[17]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ The OED uses a slightly different definition: "long thin jaws, giving a hollow appearance to the cheek".[11]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Wolff, Wienker & Sander 1993, p. 112.
  2. ^ a b Peacock, Zachary S.; Klein, Katherine P.; Mulliken, John B.; Kaban, Leonard B. (September 2014). "The Habsburg Jaw-re-examined". American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A. 164A (9): 2263–2269. doi:10.1002/ajmg.a.36639. PMID 24942320. S2CID 35651759.
  3. ^ Zamudio Martínez, Gabriela; Zamudio Martínez, Adriana (2020). "A Royal Family Heritage: The Habsburg Jaw". Facial Plastic Surgery & Aesthetic Medicine. 22 (2): 120–121. doi:10.1089/fpsam.2019.29017.mar. PMID 32083497. S2CID 211232475.
  4. ^ MedlinePlus Encyclopedia: Prognathism
  5. ^ Though prognathism is not the norm among white Americans, white Americans can occasionally have non-pathological prognathism, similar to that of other populations around the world in which prognathism is more common, and clearly distinct from the examples of pathological prognathism shown in the pictures.
  6. ^ Vioarsdóttir, O'Higgins & Stringer 2002, pp. 211–229.
  7. ^ "Medical Definition of de Lange syndrome". MedicineNet.
  8. ^ a b Vilas et al. 2019, pp. 563–571.
  9. ^ Beuchat 2015.
  10. ^ Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM): PROGNATHISM, MANDIBULAR - 176700
  11. ^ "lantern jaw". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  12. ^ a b c Vilas et al. 2019.
  13. ^ Wolff, Wienker & Sander 1993, pp. 112–116.
  14. ^ a b Безуглый, Т. А. (2020). "Влияние На Человека Признаков, Передаваемых По Аутосомно-Рецессивному Типу (на Примере Династии Габсбургов)" [Influence on the Human Traits Transmitted According to the Autosomal-Recessive Type (on the Example of the Habsburg Dynasty)] (in Russian).
  15. ^ Mitchell 2013, pp. 303–308.
  16. ^ "Treating Prognathism: Ways to Correct Abnormal Jaw Alignment".
  17. ^ "Prognathous". A Glossary of Entomological Terms. Retrieved 11 September 2019.

General and cited sources edit

  • Beuchat, Carol (12 March 2015). "Why all the fuss about inbreeding?". Institute of Canine Biology. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  • Mitchell, Sylvia Z (May 2013). Mariana of Austria and Imperial Spain: Court, Dynastic, and International Politics in Seventeenth-Century Europe (Ph.D.). Coral Gables, Florida: University of Miami.
  • Vilas, Román; Ceballos, Francisco C.; Al-Soufi, Laila; González-García, Raúl; Moreno, Carlos; Moreno, Manuel; Villanueva, Laura; Ruiz, Luis; Mateos, Jesús; González, David; Ruiz, Jennifer; Cinza, Aitor; Monje, Florencio; Álvarez, Gonzalo (17 November 2019). "Is the 'Habsburg jaw' related to inbreeding?". Annals of Human Biology. 46 (7–8): 553–561. doi:10.1080/03014460.2019.1687752. PMID 31786955. S2CID 208536371.
  • Vioarsdóttir, US; O'Higgins, O; Stringer, C (2002). "A geometric morphometric study of regional differences in the ontogeny of the modern human facial skeleton". J. Anat. 201 (3): 211–229. doi:10.1046/j.1469-7580.2002.00092.x. PMC 1570912. PMID 12363273.
  • Wolff, G; Wienker, T F; Sander, H (1 February 1993). "On the genetics of mandibular prognathism: analysis of large European noble families". Journal of Medical Genetics. 30 (2): 112–116. doi:10.1136/jmg.30.2.112. PMC 1016265. PMID 8445614.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of prognathism at Wiktionary

prognathism, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Prognathism news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Prognathism also called Habsburg chin Habsburg s chin Habsburg jaw or Habsburg s jaw 2 3 primarily in the context of its prevalence amongst members of the House of Habsburg 2 is a positional relationship of the mandible or maxilla to the skeletal base where either of the jaws protrudes beyond a predetermined imaginary line in the coronal plane of the skull clarification needed In general dentistry oral and maxillofacial surgery and orthodontics this is assessed clinically or radiographically cephalometrics The word prognathism derives from Greek pro pro meaning forward and gna8os gnathos jaw One or more types of prognathism can result in the common condition of malocclusion in which an individual s top teeth and lower teeth do not align properly citation needed PrognathismOther namesHabsburg jawIllustration of different typesSpecialtyOrthodontics TypesAlveolar Maxillary Mandibular or progenismCausesMultifactorialTreatmentOrthodontics oral and maxillofacial surgeryFrequencyChildren 0 5 to 2 0 Adult 2 0 to 4 0 1 Contents 1 Presentation 2 Classification 2 1 Alveolar prognathism 2 2 Maxillary prognathism 2 3 Mandibular prognathism progenism 3 Treatment 4 In insects 5 See also 6 Explanatory notes 7 Citations 8 General and cited sources 9 External linksPresentation edit nbsp Mandibular prognathism where teeth have almost reached their final straight position by dental braces This makes the prognathism more obvious and it will take an operation moving the jaw backwards to give the ultimate result Prognathism in humans particularly alveolar prognathism can occur due to normal variation among phenotypes In human populations where prognathism is not the norm it may be a malformation the result of injury a disease state a hereditary condition 4 or if not pathological may simply be a minority trait within a population 5 Prognathism is considered a disorder only if it affects chewing speech or social function as a byproduct of severely affected aesthetics of the face citation needed Clinical determinants include soft tissue analysis where the clinician assesses nasolabial angle the relationship of the soft tissue portion of the chin to the nose and the relationship between the upper and lower lips also used is dental arch relationship assessment such as Angle s classification citation needed Cephalometric analysis is the most accurate way of determining all types of prognathism as it includes assessments of skeletal base occlusal plane angulation facial height soft tissue assessment and anterior dental angulation Various calculations and assessments of the information in a cephalometric radiograph allow the clinician to objectively determine dental and skeletal relationships and determine a treatment plan citation needed Prognathism should not be confused with micrognathism although combinations of both are found It affects the middle third of the face causing it to jut out thereby increasing the facial area similar to the phenotype of archaic hominids and other apes Mandibular prognathism is a protrusion of the mandible affecting the lower third of the face Alveolar prognathism is a protrusion of that portion of the maxilla where the teeth are located in the dental lining of the upper jaw citation needed Prognathism can also be used to describe ways that the maxillary and mandibular dental arches relate to one another including malocclusion where the upper and lower teeth do not align When there is maxillary or alveolar prognathism which causes an alignment of the maxillary incisors significantly anterior to the lower teeth the condition is called an overjet When the reverse is the case and the lower jaw extends forward beyond the upper the condition is referred to as retrognathia reverse overjet citation needed Classification editAlveolar prognathism edit nbsp Alveolar prognathism caused by thumb sucking and tongue thrusting in a seven year old girl Not all alveolar prognathism is anomalous and significant differences can be observed among different ethnicities 6 Harmful habits such as thumb sucking or tongue thrusting can result in or exaggerate an alveolar prognathism causing teeth to misalign Functional appliances can be used in growing children to help modify bad habits and neuro muscular function with the aim of correcting this condition citation needed Alveolar prognathism can also easily be corrected with fixed orthodontic therapy However relapse is quite common unless the cause is removed or a long term retention is used citation needed Maxillary prognathism edit In disease states maxillary prognathism is associated with Cornelia de Lange syndrome 7 however so called false maxillary prognathism or more accurately retrognathism where there is a lack of growth of the mandible is by far a more common condition citation needed Prognathism if not extremely severe can be treated in growing patients with orthodontic functional or orthopaedic appliances In adult patients this condition can be corrected by means of a combined surgical orthodontic treatment where most of the time a mandibular advancement is performed The same can be said for mandibular prognathism citation needed Mandibular prognathism progenism edit nbsp Leopold I showing progenismPathologic mandibular prognathism is a potentially disfiguring genetic disorder where the lower jaw outgrows the upper resulting in an extended chin and a crossbite In both humans and animals it can be the result of inbreeding 8 In brachycephalic or flat faced dogs like shih tzus and boxers it can lead to problems such as underbite 9 In humans it results in a condition sometimes called lantern jaw reportedly derived from 15th century horn lanterns which had convex sides 10 a Traits such as these were often exaggerated by inbreeding and can be traced within specific families 8 Although more common than appreciated the best known historical example is Habsburg jaw or Habsburg or Austrian lip due to its prevalence in members of the House of Habsburg which can be traced in their portraits 12 The process of portrait mapping has provided tools for geneticists and pedigree analysis most instances are considered polygenic 13 but a number of researchers believe that this trait is transmitted through an autosomal recessive type of inheritance 14 12 Allegedly introduced into the family by a member of the Piast dynasty it is clearly visible on family tomb sculptures in St John s Cathedral Warsaw A high propensity for politically motivated intermarriage among Habsburgs meant the dynasty was virtually unparalleled in the degree of its inbreeding Charles II of Spain who lived 1661 to 1700 is said to have had the most pronounced case of the Habsburg jaw on record 15 due to the high number of consanguineous marriages in the dynasty preceding his birth 14 12 nbsp Charles II of Spain showing Habsburg jaw a severe type of mandibular prognathism nbsp Vlad III of Wallachia showing progenism nbsp Frederick regent of Denmark Norway showing progenism nbsp Pedro II of Brazil showing progenism His mother was Archduchess Maria Leopoldina of Austria a member of the House of Habsburg Lorraine by birth Treatment editPrior to the development of modern dentistry there was no treatment for this condition those who had it simply endured it Today the most common treatment for mandibular prognathism is a combination of orthodontics and orthognathic surgery The orthodontics can involve braces removal of teeth or a mouthguard 16 In insects editIn entomology prognathous means that the mouthparts face forwards being at the front of the head rather than facing downwards as in some insects 17 See also editDental pathologyExplanatory notes edit The OED uses a slightly different definition long thin jaws giving a hollow appearance to the cheek 11 Citations edit Wolff Wienker amp Sander 1993 p 112 a b Peacock Zachary S Klein Katherine P Mulliken John B Kaban Leonard B September 2014 The Habsburg Jaw re examined American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A 164A 9 2263 2269 doi 10 1002 ajmg a 36639 PMID 24942320 S2CID 35651759 Zamudio Martinez Gabriela Zamudio Martinez Adriana 2020 A Royal Family Heritage The Habsburg Jaw Facial Plastic Surgery amp Aesthetic Medicine 22 2 120 121 doi 10 1089 fpsam 2019 29017 mar PMID 32083497 S2CID 211232475 MedlinePlus Encyclopedia Prognathism Though prognathism is not the norm among white Americans white Americans can occasionally have non pathological prognathism similar to that of other populations around the world in which prognathism is more common and clearly distinct from the examples of pathological prognathism shown in the pictures Vioarsdottir O Higgins amp Stringer 2002 pp 211 229 Medical Definition of de Lange syndrome MedicineNet a b Vilas et al 2019 pp 563 571 Beuchat 2015 Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man OMIM PROGNATHISM MANDIBULAR 176700 lantern jaw Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b c Vilas et al 2019 Wolff Wienker amp Sander 1993 pp 112 116 a b Bezuglyj T A 2020 Vliyanie Na Cheloveka Priznakov Peredavaemyh Po Autosomno Recessivnomu Tipu na Primere Dinastii Gabsburgov Influence on the Human Traits Transmitted According to the Autosomal Recessive Type on the Example of the Habsburg Dynasty in Russian Mitchell 2013 pp 303 308 Treating Prognathism Ways to Correct Abnormal Jaw Alignment Prognathous A Glossary of Entomological Terms Retrieved 11 September 2019 General and cited sources editBeuchat Carol 12 March 2015 Why all the fuss about inbreeding Institute of Canine Biology Retrieved 16 April 2020 Mitchell Sylvia Z May 2013 Mariana of Austria and Imperial Spain Court Dynastic and International Politics in Seventeenth Century Europe Ph D Coral Gables Florida University of Miami Vilas Roman Ceballos Francisco C Al Soufi Laila Gonzalez Garcia Raul Moreno Carlos Moreno Manuel Villanueva Laura Ruiz Luis Mateos Jesus Gonzalez David Ruiz Jennifer Cinza Aitor Monje Florencio Alvarez Gonzalo 17 November 2019 Is the Habsburg jaw related to inbreeding Annals of Human Biology 46 7 8 553 561 doi 10 1080 03014460 2019 1687752 PMID 31786955 S2CID 208536371 Vioarsdottir US O Higgins O Stringer C 2002 A geometric morphometric study of regional differences in the ontogeny of the modern human facial skeleton J Anat 201 3 211 229 doi 10 1046 j 1469 7580 2002 00092 x PMC 1570912 PMID 12363273 Wolff G Wienker T F Sander H 1 February 1993 On the genetics of mandibular prognathism analysis of large European noble families Journal of Medical Genetics 30 2 112 116 doi 10 1136 jmg 30 2 112 PMC 1016265 PMID 8445614 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of prognathism at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prognathism amp oldid 1214705953 Mandibular prognathism progenism, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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