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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Miani is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Miani.


American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | 1993

Craniofacial morphometry by photographic evaluations

Virgllio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Alessandro Miani; Gialuca Tartaglia

Frontal and lateral oriented profile photographs of 108 healthy young adults (57 men and 51 women) were taken, and a standardized protocol was used to quantitatively describe the depicted craniofacial soft tissue structure, the relationships among facial structures, and head posture relative to the ground. Pictures were taken in two body positions, standing and sitting. The male faces were, on average, wider and longer than the female faces, in both frontal and lateral views, with greater differences in the mouth and chin regions. Both sexes were generally symmetrical. Persons who were asymmetric compensated for their appearance by changing head posture relative to the ground, so that in the frontal plane, the interpupillary axis and the occlusal plane were parallel to the ground. Measurements can be employed in computer graphic reconstructions used in orthognathic, maxillofacial, and plastic surgery. In the standing position, the Frankfurt plane was directed upward and forward, with a mean angle of 13 degrees relative to the ground. In seated subjects, it was more nearly horizontal (5 degrees in the men, 8 degrees in the women). This result confirms the need for a careful reevaluation of standard cephalometric and photographic protocols.


Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology | 1990

Calcification of the stylohyoid ligament: incidence and morphoquantitative evaluations.

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Davide Sigurtá; Antonio D'Addona; Lorenzo Dalloca; Alessandro Miani; Fabio Tafuro; Chiarella Sforza

To study the incidence of calcification of the stylohyoid ligament, 286 orthopantomographs were analyzed. All patients had no symptoms. The total incidence of calcification was noted to be high, at 84.4%. The number and the length of calcifications increased with age, and there was no relationship to sex or mandibular size. The phenomenon is often evident bilaterally. The variety of results reported in the references depends on different criteria in radiographic evaluation and in patient selection.


American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | 1998

A three-dimensional computerized mesh diagram analysis and its application in soft tissue facial morphometry

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Johannes H. Schmitz; Alessandro Miani; Graziano Serrao

A modified computerized mesh diagram analysis that allows rapid and independent quantifications of soft tissue facial size and shape in the three-dimensional space is presented. Normal references are provided, and the application of the method is also exemplified by the analysis of two maxillofacial surgical patients. The Three-Dimensional Facial Morphometry method has been used for the collection of the x, y, z coordinates of 22 soft tissue landmarks in 50 men and 50 women (all healthy young white adults). The method detects the three-dimensional coordinates of retroreflective, wireless markers positioned on selected facial landmarks with two charge-coupled device cameras, working in the infrared field. The midpoint between the right and left tragus landmarks served as the origin of the coordinate axes, and the landmark coordinates were rotated, setting the intercantheal line horizontal on both the frontal and the horizontal planes, and the Campers plane inclined at -7.5 degrees on the sagittal plane. A standardized mesh of equidistant horizontal (dimension: half the upper face width), vertical (half the vertical projection of upper face height), and anteroposterior (half the horizontal projection of upper face depth) lines was consequently constructed. The lattice was replicated on the entire face and comprised 84 parallelepipeds. Both male and female reference meshes had a harmonious and symmetric appearance, with gender differences in facial size but not in facial shape. The standard normal reference was superimposed on the patients tracing, and the global (size plus shape) difference was then evaluated by the calculation of the relevant displacement vectors for each soft tissue landmark. A global difference factor was calculated as the sum of the modules of all the displacement vectors. Consequently, a size normalization was performed, and the shape difference (size-standardized) was then evaluated by the calculation of new relevant displacement vectors for each landmark, as well as a shape--global difference vectors.


American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | 1994

Head posture and cephalometric analyses: An integrated photographic/radiographic technique

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Domenica Germano; Luca L. Dalloca; Alessandro Miani

A photographic technique for natural head posture (NHP) recording that can be associated to standard radiographic exposures is presented. It allows the evaluation of radiographs, according to both the standard intracranial references and NHP. On the NHP photograph, the angle between the soft tissue nasion-pogonion line and the true vertical is calculated and this value is used to rotate the standard radiograph around the Bolton point. The technique has been applied to 40 private orthodontic patients (24 females and 16 males, aged 7 to 20 years, mean 12.9 years). The hard tissue Frankfurt plane in NHP showed a wide variation: 80% of the patients had orbitale lower than porion (mean angle -6° relative to the ground), 20% had orbitale higher than porion (mean angle 4°). The position of this plane in NHP seemed to be different in the two sexes, with more males having the Frankfurt plane going upwards than females. The soft tissue Frankfurt plane (tragus-orbitale) in NHP was directed upwards (head extended) in 53% of patients. The two Frankfurt planes were never coincident in all subjects; the tragus was always lower and more anterior than porion. On average, the angle tragus-orbitale-porion was about 6°. In young orthodontic patients NHP is therefore highly variable, gender dependent, and cannot be deduced from mean population values. Nevertheless, the evaluation of head position should be performed in each young patient before and during the treatment, to verify how the combined effects of therapy and growth act.A photographic technique for natural head posture (NHP) recording that can be associated to standard radiographic exposures is presented. It allows the evaluation of radiographs, according to both the standard intracranial references and NHP. On the NHP photograph, the angle between the soft tissue nasion-pogonion line and the true vertical is calculated, and this value is used to rotate the standard radiograph around the Bolton point. The technique has been applied to 40 private orthodontic patients (24 females and 16 males, aged 7 to 20 years, mean 12.9 years). The hard tissue Frankfurt plane in NHP showed a wide variation: 80% of the patients had orbitale lower than porion (mean angle -6 degrees relative to the ground), 20% had orbitale higher than porion (mean angle 4 degrees). The position of this plane in NHP seemed to be different in the two sexes, with more males having the Frankfurt plane going upwards than females. The soft tissue Frankfurt plane (tragus-orbitale) in NHP was directed upwards (head extended) in 53% of patients. The two Frankfurt planes were never coincident in all subjects; the tragus was always lower and more anterior than porion. On average, the angle tragus-orbitale-porion was about 6 degrees. In young orthodontic patients NHP is therefore highly variable, gender dependent, and cannot be deduced from mean population values. Nevertheless, the evaluation of head position should be performed in each young patient before and during the treatment, to verify how the combined effects of therapy and growth act.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1997

Statistical evaluation of Monson's sphere in healthy permanent dentitions in man.

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Alessandro Miani

The three-dimensional curvature of the mandibular dental arch was studied in 20 men and 20 women with sound dentitions and free from temporomandibular joint problems. The x, y, z coordinates of cusp tips of all but the third molars were obtained with a three-dimensional digitizer, and used to derive a spherical model of the curvature of the occlusal surfaces. From the best interpolating sphere the radii of the left and right curves of Spee (quasi-sagittal plane) and of the canine and molar curves of Wilson (frontal plane) were computed. The occlusal curvature of the mandibular arch was not significantly influenced by gender, even if, on average, all the computed variables were larger in men than women. The radii of the overall sphere, right and left curves of Spee, and curve of Wilson in the molar area were about 105 mm in men, and about 100 mm in women. A relatively large intrasample variability in arch curvature was found. The mean sphere radius in men was very close to the classical value of 4 in, confirming Monsons observations, but the relatively large intrasample variability prevented any definitive determination of a sexual dimorphism in the three- dimensional characteristics of occlusal curvature.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 1995

A computerized non-invasive method for the assessment of human facial volume

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Graziano Serrao; Alessandro Miani

The three-dimensional coordinates of 22 standardized soft-tissue facial landmarks were used in the definition of a three-dimensional model of the adult human face. The model allows the estimation of the volume of the face in toto and of its parts (upper, middle and lower thirds, nose). Landmark coordinates were collected in 80 healthy young adults (40 men and 40 women selected according to criteria of dentofacial normality) by infrared photogrammetry by an automated instrument, and facial volumes calculated. Sample variability was larger in women than in men; the nose and the upper third of face had the largest variability regardless of gender. On average, all volumes computed in men were significantly larger than the corresponding values computed in women. Also the lower-to-middle third face ratio was significantly higher in men than in women. The sexual dimorphism in human facial volume did not involve the different parts of the face to the same extent: a large part of male facial volume preponderance was explained by the lower third of face. The proposed facial model could adequately represent the human face in all those research and clinical fields where noninvasive surface measurements could be employed alone or in support of conventional radiographic data.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1993

Dental arch asymmetry in young healthy human subjects evaluated by Euclidean distance matrix analysis

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Alessandro Miani; Graziano Serrao

Form differences between biological structures can be evaluated using several approaches. A recently proposed method (Euclidean distance matrix analysis; EDMA) seems to be able to differentiate between size and shape differences. Here it has been applied to study the asymmetry of mandibular and maxillary arches in 50 men and 45 women with sound dentitions. The centres of gravity (centroids) of the occlusal surfaces of all permanent teeth (right second molar to left second molar) were individualized on the dental casts of subjects. The form of the right and left maxillary and mandibular hemi-arches was separately assessed by calculating all the possible linear distances between pairs of teeth within arch and side. Side differences were tested by EDMA. In men, the maxillary and the mandibular arches were both symmetrical (i.e. there were no significant differences in size or shape between the left and right hemi-arches). In women, the mandibular arch was symmetrical, but in the maxillary arch the two antimeres had a significantly different shape. No size differences were found between the left and right female hemi-arches.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1992

Mathematical definition of the curve of Spee in permanent healthy dentitions in man

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Alessandro Miani; Anna Colombo; Gianluca M. Tartaglia

The intrinsic morphology of the mandibular curve of Spee (i.e. independent from reference planes) was studied in 50 men and 45 women with sound dentitions. Left and right curves were reconstructed by a second-order quadratic interpolation of buccal cusp tips. Gender differences were found in both sides, while side differences were found only in the male sample. Male and female curves had similar concavities, but the position of the interpolating second-order quadratic curve relative to the dental arch was significantly different. The right and left male sides showed different concavities, the right-hand side being flatter than the left. Male curves appeared larger than female ones, and the left-hand side was significantly larger than the right regardless of gender. The reported second-order quadratic curves could be used as reference for prosthetic and orthodontic reconstructions.


Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry | 1992

Kinesiographic three-dimensional evaluation of mandibular border movements: A statistical study in a normal young nonpatient group

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Alessandro Miani; Graziano Serrao

Mandibular border movements were studied in a group of 74 healthy young men and women with sound dentitions and class I molar relationships. Movements were directly performed by the subjects and recorded with a mandibular kinesiograph, and slopes of the first millimeters of motion in the anterior and lateral guidances were calculated. In anterior guidance, the sagittal plane slope was steeper in men than in women, whereas the horizontal plane slope showed no gender differences. In the lateral guidances, frontal plane slopes were steeper in men than in women, with no side differences. The horizontal plane slope presented no side or sex differences. Most of the subjects demonstrated asymmetric guidances for both protrusive and the laterotrusive movements. These findings suggest that criteria for defining the norm should include asymptomatic asymmetry instead of strict morphologic symmetric appearance.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1994

Maxillary versus mandibular arch form differences in human permanent dentition assessed by Euclidean-distance matrix analysis

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Alessandro Miani; Gianluca M. Tartaglia

Euclidean-distance matrix analysis (EDMA) was used to analyse the dental arch form in 50 men and 45 women aged 20-27 yr with sound dentitions. Fourteen landmarks, corresponding to the centres of gravity (centroids) of the occlusal surfaces of all permanent teeth (right second molar to left second molar), were identified on the dental casts of subjects. All the possible linear distances between pairs of teeth were computed and maxillary/mandibular arch differences within sex were tested by EDMA. In both sexes, the maxillary arch was larger than the mandibular arch; arch shape was also significantly different. All teeth contributed to the shape difference between arches regardless of gender. EDMA also separated the influence of anterior and posterior teeth in the determination of upper/lower arch characteristics.

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Antonio D'Addona

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Giampietro Farronato

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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