The Hydrostatic Pressure Distribution in the Periodontal Ligament and the Risk of Root Resorption—A Finite Element Method (FEM) Study on the Nonlinear Innovative Model

Author:

Kuc Anna Ewa1ORCID,Sybilski Kamil2ORCID,Kotuła Jacek1ORCID,Piątkowski Grzegorz3,Kowala Beata1ORCID,Lis Joanna1,Saternus Szymon2ORCID,Sarul Michał4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dentofacial Orthopedics and Orthodontics, Wroclaw Medical University, 50-425 Wroclaw, Poland

2. Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Military University of Technology, 00-908 Warsaw, Poland

3. Greg Dent Orthodontics Sp. Z O.O., 91-163 Lodz, Poland

4. Department of Integrated Dentistry, Wroclaw Medical University, 50-425 Wroclaw, Poland

Abstract

Excessive orthodontic force can induce inflammatory tooth root resorption due to sustained high stresses within the periodontal ligament (PDL). This study aimed to analyze the PDL pressures during upper incisor retraction using the en masse method with TISAD. The finite element method (FEM) ensured consistent conditions across cases. The models included bone geometry, adjacent teeth, PDL, and orthodontic hardware, analyzed with LS-Dyna. The pressure ranged from 0.37 to 2.5 kPa across the dental arch, with the central incisors bearing 55% of the load. The pressure distribution remained consistent regardless of the force or hook height. The critical pressure (4.7 kPa) was exceeded at 600–650 g force, with notable pressure (3.88 kPa) on the palatal root wall of the right central incisor. Utilizing 0.017 × 0.025 SS archwires in MBT 0.018 brackets provided good torque control and reduced the root resorption risk when forces of 180–200 g per side were applied, maintaining light to moderate stress. Triple forces may initiate resorption, highlighting the importance of nonlinear finite element analysis (FEA) for accurate oral cavity simulations.

Funder

Military University of Technology

ANSYS National License

Publisher

MDPI AG

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