Vertical dimension of occlusion
Vertical dimension of occlusion, or VDO, also known as occlusal vertical dimension (OVD) is a term used in dentistry to indicate the superior-inferior relationship of the maxilla and the mandible when the teeth are situated in maximum intercuspation.[1]
A VDO is not only possessed by people who have teeth, however; for completely edentulous individuals who do not have any teeth with which to position themselves in maximum intercuspation, VDO can be measured based on subjective signs related to esthetics and phonetics.
In terms of esthetics, an appropriately measured VDO will appear to a layman's eye as an ordinary configuration of the patient's nose, lips and chin. An excessive VDO will appear as though the patient has something stuffed into their mouth, and the patient may not even be able to close his or her lips. A telltale indication of an excessive VDO is a patient straining to close his or her lips around the wax rims during VDO determination. Conversely, a deficient VDO will appear as though the patient's mouth has collapsed, and the chin appears too close to the nose; in essence, the patient would be over-closing his or her mouth because there would not be enough wax on the wax rims to maintain the proper vertical dimension of occlusion.
In terms of phonetics, certain sounds are made by configuring the mouth in specific ways. The two sounds most commonly used to establish a patient's VDO are sibilant and fricative sounds. Sibiliant sounds are made by allowing the maxillary incisors to nearly touch the mandibular incisors, while fricative sounds are made by allowing the maxillary incisors to touch the slightly inverted lower lip at the wet-dry line. By having the patient count upwards from fifty and then upwards from sixty, the dentist can watch and listen to the patient attempting to make first fricative and then sibilant sounds and adjust the wax rims accordingly.
A common trick is to ask the patient to say the name "Emma," as the position of the mandible immediately after completing the word is a rough estimate of the patient's proper VDO. The position after saying "Emma" is referred to as the vertical dimension at rest, or VDR. Historically, the VDO has been estimated at 3 mm less than VDR because a person will generally maintain their mandible at an opening of 3 mm when at rest.[2]
There is another practical rule that applies to many mammals which give us a very practical way to find a suitable VDO. Take the distance between the corner of the eye and the same corner in the lips (in older people the measurement should be done a little more to mesial, closer to the nose, to avoid that downpointing tip )and using a ruler apply it between the center bottom of the nose (that rises from the upper lip) and lower tip of the mandible center. (In completely edentulous, with no teeth, as referred.) Maintaining centric position.
References
- ↑ Harper, RP; Misch, CE: Current Topics in Dentistry Archived October 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine., Quintessence International, 31:4 (April 2000)
- ↑ Bhat, VS; M Gopinathan, M: Reliability of determining vertical dimension of occlusion in complete dentures: A clinical study, JIPS 2006 6:1:38-42
Further reading
- Davis Henderson, Victor L. Steffel. McCRACKEN's Removable partial prosthodontics, 4th Edition, 1973.