On Mar 19, 4:24 am,
techcalg...@hotmail.com wrote:
I'm not sure about exact terms. Maxillary lateral incisors are not
aligned (almost correct) with central incisors (rotated back). I will
need some aesthetic rotation (not translation, but forward rotation)
of my maxillary central incisors (lateral incisors and canines are
fine), along with rotating backward all mandibular incisors (not sure
about canines). There will not be a problem with occlusion after the
movement/rotation. Amount of movement at tips of incisors will be up
to 6mm (upper and lower). There is some mandibular crowding, but the
maxillary incisors are the only important aestheric change (mandibular
rotation is for occlusion).
I noticed a patent for "Do-it-yourself orthodontic kit and method"
athttp://www.freshpatents.com/Do-it-yourself-orthodontic-kit-and-method...
I'm not sure if that product is available, or if it would work in my
case. It sounds like an Essix retainer. But it got me thinking:
It appears that with some assistance I could etch and bond brackets to
my own teeth. Has this been done and what are the success rates? Do
orthodontists ever bond brackets on themselves? I am not trained in
orthodontics and not sure if there are any specific books or other
resources that I can use.
Looks like R brackets would be the best, but I am not sure if I need
banded molar brackets for rotating incisors? Or can less brackets be
used and a shorter archwire for changes to incisors only? What would
be the duration? 6 months? Looks like a fixed retainer afterwards. Is
there a low visibility fixed retainer that can be bonded on the
outside of maxillary incisors? Plastic wire?
If your only reply is "you are silly. go and pay an orthodontist"
don't bother. Anyone that can point me in the right direction here is
appreciated.
The issue isn't if you can bond your own brackets, it's correcting the
malocclusion. While it seems like you can just align the anteriors and
keep your posterior occlusion the same, it almost never works like
that. Where are you going to get the space to uncrowd your incisors?
it's your mouth though, and I"m assuming you're a DDS, so...