TY - THES AB - Cephalometrics means simply "measurement of the head," and since the nineteenth century, anthropologists have used the craniostat to make measurements on dried skulls. The desire to make these same detenninations in the living patient stimulated the development of cephalometri.c radiology. Sorenson, Hixon and co-workers6 ,7,e ,9 combined the placement of implants in the jaws, as described in 1955 by :Bjork, lO with the concept of triangulation from a three-dimensional cephalometric technique, as presented by Schwarz 11 in 1943. It is hoped that this technique will provide sufficient reliability to allow assessments of spatial changes of the skull and teeth suitable for use in longitudinal studies. Although the reliability of the above technique has already been investigated in vitro by Dennis,9 it is the purpose of this paper to establish the within-patient reliability. It is also intended to examine implant stability within the facial bones of the changing child. AU - Hodge, C. Joel DA - 1973-06-01 DO - 10.6083/M4SX6B7T DO - DOI ID - 9157 KW - Cephalometry KW - Reproducibility of Results KW - Facial Bones KW - Humans KW - Longitudinal Studies KW - Skull KW - Child KW - Radiology L1 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/9157/files/1973.hodge.c.joel.pdf L2 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/9157/files/1973.hodge.c.joel.pdf L4 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/9157/files/1973.hodge.c.joel.pdf LK - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/9157/files/1973.hodge.c.joel.pdf N2 - Cephalometrics means simply "measurement of the head," and since the nineteenth century, anthropologists have used the craniostat to make measurements on dried skulls. The desire to make these same detenninations in the living patient stimulated the development of cephalometri.c radiology. Sorenson, Hixon and co-workers6 ,7,e ,9 combined the placement of implants in the jaws, as described in 1955 by :Bjork, lO with the concept of triangulation from a three-dimensional cephalometric technique, as presented by Schwarz 11 in 1943. It is hoped that this technique will provide sufficient reliability to allow assessments of spatial changes of the skull and teeth suitable for use in longitudinal studies. Although the reliability of the above technique has already been investigated in vitro by Dennis,9 it is the purpose of this paper to establish the within-patient reliability. It is also intended to examine implant stability within the facial bones of the changing child. PB - Oregon Health and Science University PY - 1973-06-01 T1 - The within-patient reliability of a three-dimensional cephalometric implant technique TI - The within-patient reliability of a three-dimensional cephalometric implant technique UR - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/9157/files/1973.hodge.c.joel.pdf Y1 - 1973-06-01 ER -