When the Silence Speaks: The Smile

Background: Understanding the importance, value and self-image that the smile represents in the daily life of the individual remains a subject of high scientific interest. Aim: The present qualitative and exploratory study aims at understanding the importance of the self-perception of the mouth and smile on the mental representation of self-image and the well-being of the individual. Materials and Methods: The convenience sample consisted of 151 children and youngsters of both genders, ages 8 - 24 years, who used an orthodontic appliance and were invited to draw two portraits of their mouth/smile. Results: The results suggest differences in the mental representation of the mouth and the smile, namely in the investment of the drawings before and after the use of the orthodontic appliance, as well as in the expressiveness and manifestation of emotions. Discussion and Conclusions: The results suggest that the main reason that leads participants to the treatment is related to aesthetic and functional issues in which the maximizing of the mental representation of the Orthodontic Smile emerges as a new categorization of the perfect smile.


Introduction
The face is the part of the human body that portrays intended actions and expressions, denoting or externalizing feelings and emotions [1]. The expression of the face is pragmatic, since it is at this level that much of the individuals' affection is transmitted in the interaction and in the bonding with Others.
Among these facial expressions is the smile [2], the first psychic organizer, vi-tal for the construction of the self-image of the individual. Understanding the importance, value and self-image that the smile represents in the daily life of the individual remains a subject of high scientific interest. Furthermore, the aesthetic harmony that the smile provides is of the utmost importance, since having an attractive face promotes the individual's social accepted in his circles of coexistence [3] [4]. In fact, the gift of affection expressed through the smile is of difficult measurable empirical control, which emphasizes the importance of the ability in reading patient's facial expression through non-verbal language, in the therapeutic setting of Dental Medicine [5]. In fact, in a research project carried out by the Faculty of Dentistry of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, which studied the perception of the aesthetic parameters of the smile perceived by both Dentists and Patients, it was verified that the unaesthetic smile variable was the only one with a high concordance of results both for Dentists and Patients. This simultaneously emphasizes the bias in terms of the perception of orthodontic treatment's results between Dentists and Patients and the high degree of difficulty in the empirical measuring of the "smile" category [4].
Thus, a panoply of analytical principles regarding the "smile" category need to become incorporated in the field of Dental Medicine Orthodontics [6], in order to obtain enhanced clinical results. Nevertheless, in the concept of aesthetics is underlined a subjective perception of the beauty concept operated by the subject [7], in which the symmetry of the smile plays an important role in the perception of the beauty of the face [8]. The present study addresses this gap, aiming at understanding the importance of the self-perception of the mouth and smile in the mental representation of the individual's self-image perception of the face and in his well-being.

Materials and Methods
An empirical study of descriptive and exploratory nature was carried out to access the self-perception of the mouth and smile in the mental representation of the individual. The methodological strategy was of the qualitative kind, through the content analysis of a collection of Patients' drawings, combined with quantitative parameters.
The convenience sample consisted of 151 children and youngsters [11] of both genders, ages 8 -24 years, who used an orthodontic appliance for 6 months (6 M) to 1 year (1 Y), treated at the Egas Moniz University Clinic (Table A1). Patients were invited to produce two portraits (drawings) of their mouth/smile based on the following questions: 1)" What was your mouth like before you had the orthodontic appliance?" (Moment 1 (M1)); and 2) "How do you think your mouth will be when you remove the orthodontic appliance?" (Moment 2 (M2)).
In addition, all participants answered a socio-demographic inquiry and provided a written answer to the question: "Why do you use an orthodontic appliance?" According to the selected sample, 302 valid drawings were collected and analyzed, 151 of which representing M1 ("What was your mouth like before you had the orthodontic appliance?") and 151 of which representing M2 ("How do you think your mouth will look like when you remove the orthodontic appliance?"). A qualitative content grid for the analysis of the 302 drawings was originally designed, to study its pictorial representations. Four categories were created in the content analysis grid, e.g., 1) smile, 2) drawing of the figure, 3) appearance and 4) teeth. To further detail the content analysis, twelve subcategories were created, e.g., 1) size, 2) contours/limits, 3) opening of the mouth, 4) lips, 5) jaw, 6) with detail, 7) fractured, 8) with diastema, 9) crooked, 10) straight, 11) in saw and 12) well positioned.
With the purpose of knowing which smiles denounced Patients' affection and well-being, the categorization of the smile of Freitas-Magalhães was used [12] [13]. Through the content analysis grid created for the Patients' drawings, two types of smile were considered regarding the psychological perception of affection denounced by the smile: 1) "Broad Smile", which was considered to be the closest to the concept of happiness; and 2) "Superior Smile", which revealed a visual necessity of connection with other individuals in social contexts.
The statistic treatment of the descriptive data was analyzed using the software As a criterion of objectivity with regard to the task proposed to the selected subjects, they were asked to portray in their drawings only the mouth/smile and not other parts of the face, as to limit the appeal to draw the face, thus centering the analysis' object empirical focus on the smile [15].

Results and Discussion
The results suggest differences in the mental representation of the mouth and the smile, namely in the investment of the drawings before (M1) and after (M2) the use of the orthodontic appliance, as well as in the expressiveness and manifestation of emotions in these two moments.

Journal of Biosciences and Medicines
According to the appearance category, namely in the opening of the mouth subcategory, there was a decrease in the pictorial representation of the semi open mouth in M2, evidenced in drawings with more pronounced labial commissures at the level of the lips and showing a complete visualization of the upper and lower dental arches. Such is corroborated by the teeth and drawing of the figure categories ( Figure 1) as both present a greater number of exposed teeth. In addition, more invested drawings were presented in the smile category in M2, when compared to M1.
The results also suggest that the main reason that led Patients to orthodontic treatment is related rather to functional issues than aesthetic ones, contrary to the results obtained in two studies carried out by Gonçalves and Torres at the University Clinic Egas Moniz-Portugal, which pointed to the aesthetic component and the quest for the "perfect smile" as the leitmotiv for the demand of orthodontic treatment in Dental Medicine [9] [10].
After the completion of the content analysis of the written answers to the question "Why do you use an orthodontic appliance?", in which a total of 103 written answers were collected (68.67%), results suggest the main reason for the use of orthodontic appliance to be related to the functional well-being of the oral cavity. This seems to be corroborated by the content analysis of drawings in M2, revealing the presence of a broad smile (M2 = 86.1%) and well-being (Figure 2), this emphasizing the "Broad Smile" as the closest to the concept of happiness [12].
The results also reveal differences in the self-perception of the mouth after the use of the orthodontic appliance (M2), namely by more invested drawings, more detailed and complete drawings and drawings with straight mouths and more aligned teeth. This fact may be connoted to the timing of the questionnaire in the treatment pathway (6 M -1 Y) suggesting that subjects may have a clinically induced speech about the Orthodontic Smile.
Likewise, the results point to the fact that the smile category ( Figure 3) is predominantly illustrated with the teeth category (in terms of dental arcades) in detriment of the absence of the lips subcategory (M1 = 70.9%; M2 = 70.8%), with an exacerbation of the upper and lower dental arch. This suggests the concern of subjects regarding the oral health of teeth, seen as clinical entities that constitute the dental arcades.   In this line of thought, the execution of the task (focused on the teeth category) was correctly perceived by the sample subjects, supported by the fact that only one of the subjects has drawn the teeth category with an orthodontic appliance applied. The teeth category is the one that shows the most significant changes between M1 and M2. The most striking changes are reflected at the level of the fractured, with diastema, crooked, straight and well positioned subcategories. Moreover, the fractured and straight subcategories ( Figure 5) evidence a noticeable percentage decrease in M2, regarding the drawing of fractured teeth (M1 = 5.3%, M2 = 0.7%) and crooked teeth (M1 = 88.1%, M2 = 17.9%).

Conclusions
The aesthetic harmony that the smile provides is of the utmost importance for Patients, since having an attractive face promotes the individual's acceptance in his psychosocial context. It should be noted that when subjects were submitted to Orthodontic treatment, they seemed to associate the smile category to the social display of a look with Perfect Teeth-the so-called Orthodontic Smile-in clear contradiction to the Perfect Smile, which was connoted to the subcategory lips.