Charles J. Burstone
Charles J. Burstone | |
---|---|
Born |
Kansas City, United States. | April 4, 1928
Died | February 11, 2015 86) | (aged
Education | Washington School of Dental Medicine |
Known for | Being the 'father of' Biomechanics in orthodontics. |
Medical career | |
Profession | Dentist |
Institutions |
University of Indiana Orthodontics UConn Health Center |
Specialism | Orthodontics |
Charles J. Burstone (April 4, 1928 - February 11, 2015) was an American Orthodontist who was notable for his contributions to biomechanics and force-systems in the field of Orthodontics. He was well known for co-development of new orthodontic material such as beta titanium, nickel titanium, and long fiber-reinforced composite.[1] He has written more than 200 articles in scientific field.[2][3]
Career
Dr. Burstone was chairman of Indiana School of Orthodontics in 1961. In 1970, he created Orthodontic Department at University of Connecticut. He was the head of the department from 1970 to 1992. Eventually in 1994, he was appointed Professor Emeritus in the Orthodontic Department. He eventually retired and spent his time at Uconn Health Center.[4] Dr. Burstone published his first paper in 1959 in Journal of Dental Research. Burstone and Legan in their 1980 paper proposed a constructed horizontal line. This line is drawn through nasion at an angle of 7 degrees to the SN line. They developed this line because of reliability issues with the SN line when one can easily place the Sella Point up/down which can change the cephalometric measurements. This line tends to be parallel to the true horizontal line.[5] Dr. Burstone also formulated B line which is a line constructed from soft tissue Subnasale to Soft Tissue Pogonion.[6] Dr. Burstone also developed COGS (Cephalometrics for Orthognathic Surgery) Analysis for patients requiring orthognathic surgery.
Dr. Burstone worked with Dr. Ravindra Nanda at University of Connecticut Health Center. Dr. Flavio Uribe, current Program Director of the Uconn Orthodontic Department, received the Charles J. Burstone Endowed Professorship in Orthodontics in 2012.[7]
He died at the age of 86 in Seoul, South Korea.
Textbooks
- The Biomechanical Foundation of Clinical Orthodontics published in 2015
- Problem Solving in Orthodontics: Goal-Oriented Treatment Strategies published in 2000
- Retention and Stability in Orthodontics published in 1993
- The Biology of Tooth Movement published in 1988
Awards and positions
- 1956 - AAO Research Essay Award
- 1965 - Appointed to dental study section of US Public Health Service
- 1969 - President of Great Lake Society of Orthodontists
- 1979 - Director of American Board of Orthodontists
- 1983 - Strang Award by Connecticut Society of Orthodontists
- 1983 - Tokyo Medical-Dental Research Award
- 1986 - President of American Board of Orthodontists
- 1987 - Sociade De Ortodoncia De Chile Award
- 1990 - Robert Strang Memorial Lecture Award
- 1991 - Jarabak Lecture Award, University of Michigan
- 1994 - Inducted into Royal College of Surgeons in Edinburgh, Scotland
- 1999 - Ketcham Award by American Society of Orthodontists
References
- ↑ Nanda, Ravindra. "The editor's corner: Dr. Charles J. Burstone". Journal of clinical orthodontics. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
- ↑ Burstone, Charles (2014). "Physics and clinical orthodontics: 100 years ago and today". American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics. PMID 25726388.
- ↑ Burstone, Charles; Leagen, H. "Soft tissue cephalometric analysis for orthognathic surgery". Journal of Oral Surgery. PMID 6932485.
- ↑ "Charles J Burstone". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
- ↑ Burstone, Charles; Leagen, H. "Soft tissue cephalometric analysis for orthognathic surgery". Journal of Oral Surgery. PMID 6932485.
- ↑ Burstone, Charles; Leagen, H. "Soft tissue cephalometric analysis for orthognathic surgery". Journal of Oral Surgery. PMID 6932485.
- ↑ "New Burstone Professor Advancing Orthodontics Field - UConn Today". today.uconn.edu. Retrieved 2016-10-30.