(1) Background: Posterior crossbite associated with maxillary transverse deficiency is commonly managed with maxillary expansion, yet the correspondence between laboratory activation behavior and the clinical response of nickel–titanium leaf-spring expanders remains insufficiently defined; therefore, this study aimed to compare in vitro and in vivo performance of the Leaf Expander® and to assess their agreement. (2) Methods: A retrospective sample of 15 mixed-dentition patients (7–10 years) treated at two university centers with a Leaf Expander® (6 mm screw; 900 g) was evaluated; interpremolar (E–E), intermolar (6–6), and intercanine (C–C) distances were recorded at baseline (T0, digital models) and at follow-up visits (T1–T5, caliper measurements), while mechanical compression testing (Instron 3365) quantified force release across the activation sequence; normality (Shapiro–Wilk), parametric analyses, and Pearson correlation were used. (3) Results Posterior crossbite correction was achieved in all completed cases, with mean total increases (T0–T5) of 5.4 mm (E–E), 4.4 mm (6–6), and 6.0 mm (C–C); early expansion (T1–T0) averaged 2.5 mm at E–E, and laboratory curves showed an activation peak followed by sustained force release (~6.5–9 N) and a residual-load phase. Agreement between declared activation and clinical response was higher for E–E and 6–6 than for C–C, which showed greater variability. (4) Conclusions: These findings support the Leaf Expander® as an effective compliance-free slow expansion device and indicate that laboratory force behavior can help interpret the clinical expansion timeline, including delayed expression after activation.

In Vitro and In Vivo Performance of the Leaf Expander®: Agreement Between Laboratory Testing and Clinical Expansion

Abate A.;Deiana T.;Silvestrini Biavati F.;Ugolini A.
2026-01-01

Abstract

(1) Background: Posterior crossbite associated with maxillary transverse deficiency is commonly managed with maxillary expansion, yet the correspondence between laboratory activation behavior and the clinical response of nickel–titanium leaf-spring expanders remains insufficiently defined; therefore, this study aimed to compare in vitro and in vivo performance of the Leaf Expander® and to assess their agreement. (2) Methods: A retrospective sample of 15 mixed-dentition patients (7–10 years) treated at two university centers with a Leaf Expander® (6 mm screw; 900 g) was evaluated; interpremolar (E–E), intermolar (6–6), and intercanine (C–C) distances were recorded at baseline (T0, digital models) and at follow-up visits (T1–T5, caliper measurements), while mechanical compression testing (Instron 3365) quantified force release across the activation sequence; normality (Shapiro–Wilk), parametric analyses, and Pearson correlation were used. (3) Results Posterior crossbite correction was achieved in all completed cases, with mean total increases (T0–T5) of 5.4 mm (E–E), 4.4 mm (6–6), and 6.0 mm (C–C); early expansion (T1–T0) averaged 2.5 mm at E–E, and laboratory curves showed an activation peak followed by sustained force release (~6.5–9 N) and a residual-load phase. Agreement between declared activation and clinical response was higher for E–E and 6–6 than for C–C, which showed greater variability. (4) Conclusions: These findings support the Leaf Expander® as an effective compliance-free slow expansion device and indicate that laboratory force behavior can help interpret the clinical expansion timeline, including delayed expression after activation.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1306396
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