微电脑断层矿物密度剖面作为早期龋病活动性评估的参考标准。

IF 2.9 2区 医学 Q1 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE Caries Research Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-16 DOI:10.1159/000533563
Adam Michael Hoxie, Aline de Almeida Neves, Kevin Moss, Adalberto Bastos de Vasconcellos, Andrea Ferreira Zandona, Apoena Aguiar Ribeiro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

早期龋齿诊断对牙科治疗决策至关重要,需要确定病变活动:龋齿病变是活跃的(逐渐脱矿)还是停止的(逐渐再矿化)。本研究旨在确定活跃和静止光滑表面牙釉质病变之间的微断层扫描(micro-CT)差异,通过创建离体龋活动评估的阈值来量化这些微ct差异,作为未来的参考标准,并对剩余样本验证这些阈值。选择拔除的人恒牙(n = 59)作为声音表面和无空化光滑表面的龋齿。然后,根据国际龋齿分类和管理系统(ICCMS)活动标准,校准个体通过视觉触觉检查检查每个表面的龋齿活动情况。通过micro-CT扫描每颗牙齿,并根据病变深度绘制矿物质密度。曲线下面积(AUC)代表牙釉质最外层96 μm的密度损失。通过微型ct获得AUC阈值,根据金标准审查员对声音、不活动和活动病变的评估,分别对声音、再矿化和去矿化表面进行分类。所建立的AUC阈值与鉴定脱矿化病变的评估一致(k = 0.45),具有高灵敏度(0.73)和特异性(0.77)。本研究证明了脱矿化病变、再矿化病变和声表面之间的可量化差异,这有助于建立micro-CT作为龋齿活动的参考标准,可用于改善临床和实验室龋齿评估。
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Microcomputed Tomography Mineral Density Profile as Reference Standard for Early Carious Lesion Activity Assessment.

Early caries diagnosis is crucial to treatment decisions in dentistry and requires identification of lesion activity: whether a carious lesion is active (progressively demineralizing) or arrested (progressively remineralizing). This study aimed to identify microtomographic (micro-CT) differences between active and arrested smooth surface enamel lesions, to quantify those micro-CT differences by creating thresholds for ex vivo caries activity assessment to serve as a future reference standard, and to validate those thresholds against the remaining sample. Extracted human permanent teeth (n = 59) were selected for sound surfaces and non-cavitated smooth surface carious lesions. Each surface was then examined for caries activity by calibrated individuals via visual-tactile examination using the International Caries Classification and Management System (ICCMS) activity criteria. Each tooth was scanned via micro-CT and the mineral density was plotted against lesion depth. The area under the curve (AUC) was calculated and represented the loss of density for the outermost 96 μm of enamel. AUC thresholds obtained from micro-CT were established to classify sound, remineralized, and demineralized surfaces against the gold standard examiner's lesion assessment of sound, inactive, and active lesions, respectively. The established AUC thresholds demonstrated moderate agreement with the assessment in identifying demineralized lesions (k = 0.45), with high sensitivity (0.73) and specificity (0.77). This study demonstrated quantifiable differences among demineralized lesions, remineralized lesions, and sound surfaces, which contributes to the establishment of micro-CT as a reference standard for caries activity that may be used to improve clinical and laboratorial dental caries evaluations.

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来源期刊
Caries Research
Caries Research 医学-牙科与口腔外科
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
34
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Caries Research'' publishes epidemiological, clinical and laboratory studies in dental caries, erosion and related dental diseases. Some studies build on the considerable advances already made in caries prevention, e.g. through fluoride application. Some aim to improve understanding of the increasingly important problem of dental erosion and the associated tooth wear process. Others monitor the changing pattern of caries in different populations, explore improved methods of diagnosis or evaluate methods of prevention or treatment. The broad coverage of current research has given the journal an international reputation as an indispensable source for both basic scientists and clinicians engaged in understanding, investigating and preventing dental disease.
期刊最新文献
Selective outcome reporting bias in randomized controlled trials on dental caries in children and adolescents: A meta-research study. Is poor self-rated health associated with higher caries experience in adults? The HUNT4 Oral Health Study. Concentration and Stability of Fluoride Chemically Available in Charcoal-Containing Toothpastes. Dentists' Treatment Decisions Concerning Restorations in Adult Patients in North Norway: A Cross-Sectional Tromsø 7 Study. Dietary Carbohydrates Modulate Streptococcus mutans Adherence and Bacterial Proteome.
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