3D Method for Occlusal Tooth Wear Assessment in Presence of Substantial Changes on Other Tooth Surfaces

Nikolaos Gkantidis*, Konstantinos Dritsas, Christos Katsaros, Demetrios Halazonetis, Yijin Ren

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    18 Citations (Scopus)
    96 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Early diagnosis and timely management of tooth or dental material wear is imperative to avoid extensive restorations. Previous studies suggested different methods for tooth wear assessment, but no study has developed a three-dimensional (3D) superimposition technique applicable in cases where tooth surfaces, other than the occlusal, undergo extensive morphological changes. Here, we manually grinded plaster incisors and canines to simulate occlusal tooth wear of varying severity in teeth that received a wire retainer bonded on their lingual surfaces, during the assessment period. The corresponding dental casts were scanned using a surface scanner. The modified tooth crowns were best-fit approximated to the original crowns using seven 3D superimposition techniques (two reference areas with varying settings) and the gold standard technique (GS: intact adjacent teeth and alveolar processes as superimposition reference), which provided the true value. Only a specific technique (complete crown with 20% estimated overlap of meshes), which is applicable in actual clinical data, showed perfect agreement with the GS technique in all cases (median difference: -0.002, max absolute difference: 0.178 mm(3)). The outcomes of the suggested and the GS technique were highly reproducible (max difference <0.040 mm(3)). The presented technique offers low cost, convenient, accurate, and risk-free tooth wear assessment.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number3937
    Number of pages13
    JournalJournal of Clinical Medicine
    Volume9
    Issue number12
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 4-Dec-2020

    Keywords

    • tooth wear
    • measurement method
    • quantitative assessment
    • three-dimensional imaging
    • surface model
    • three-dimensional superimposition
    • orthodontic retention
    • fixed retainers

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