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Pierre Fauchard the “inventor” of orthodontics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 August 2011
Abstract
No one before Pierre Fauchard had claimed to be able to move teeth except Celsus who suggested applying finger pressure to a tooth that was erupting in the wrong direction.
Fauchard advised dentists to examine a patient’s mouth and occlusion first and then, if necessary, to use one of a number of methods he proposed to “straighten” irregular teeth. The principal device was a “plate,” a small segment of thin metal attached to anchor teeth from which force could be exerted on mal-positioned teeth. He uprighted teeth leaning inward by luxation with a “pelican.”
The two chapters of his book that were devoted to “straightening” teeth constitute the origin of modern orthodontics.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Journal of Dentofacial Anomalies and Orthodontics , Volume 14 , Issue 1: P. Fauchard - Varia , March 2011 , 104
- Copyright
- © RODF / EDP Sciences