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What is Condylar Parameters That Determine a Normal TM Joint Foundation

Handbook of Research on Clinical Applications of Computerized Occlusal Analysis in Dental Medicine
The condyle must be evaluated with imaging to determine whether the foundation is normal as confirmed by three parameters that relate to the condylar assessment. The determination of a normal condyle is based upon the condyle’s overall growth, and size, relative to the overlying fossa. Ideally the condyle comprises 60-66% of the glenoid fossa dimension, it has 8 mm sagittal and 20 mm coronal dimensions, and a volume of 120/160 mm 2 axially, and it should demonstrate smoothly convex sagittal and coronal planes.
Published in Chapter:
Temporomandibular Joint Imaging
Mark Piper, DMD MD (Piper Educational and Research Center, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-9254-9.ch009
Abstract
Computerized tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the temporomandibular joint are often not a routine part of a dental patient's pain and clinical evaluation. As a result, the most poorly understood region within the masticatory system is the temporomandibular joint foundation. Unfortunately, patient care and occlusal management are often compromised because of a lack of insight into the relationship between the anatomy of the temporomandibular joints and the occlusion. This chapter's four distinct sections review the key concepts about the temporomandibular joint foundation anatomical structures, detail structurally intact and structurally altered temporomandibular joint anatomy, clarify how structurally altered temporomandibular joints influence occlusal function, and classify the stages of temporomandibular joint structural degeneration. The concept of joint-based malocclusion is explored with numerous temporomandibular joint foundation anomalous software renderings, and sample CT and MR images, which together illustrate in detail how soft tissue and bony abnormalities in a structurally altered temporomandibular joint can create distortions in the occlusion. Lastly, the chapter addresses the specific requirements a clinician must technically master to perform a comprehensive CT or MR examination.
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