Restorative treatment decision making with unaided visual examination, intraoral camera and operating microscope

This study assessed the restorative treatment options of the occlusal surfaces of teeth examined with unaided visual assistance, an intraoral camera and an operating microscope. Sixty-eight extracted human molars were mounted to perform mouth models with a premolar in contact on both sides. Four obs...

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Veröffentlicht in:Operative dentistry 2006-01, Vol.31 (1), p.55-59
Hauptverfasser: Erten, Hülya, Uçtasli, Mine Betül, Akarslan, Zühre Zafersoy, Uzun, Ozgür, Semiz, Mustafa
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 55
container_title Operative dentistry
container_volume 31
creator Erten, Hülya
Uçtasli, Mine Betül
Akarslan, Zühre Zafersoy
Uzun, Ozgür
Semiz, Mustafa
description This study assessed the restorative treatment options of the occlusal surfaces of teeth examined with unaided visual assistance, an intraoral camera and an operating microscope. Sixty-eight extracted human molars were mounted to perform mouth models with a premolar in contact on both sides. Four observers examined the models in a phantom head, which simulated clinical conditions, using three techniques: unaided visual examination, intraoral camera and operating microscope. The observers were asked to assess the occlusal surface of each tooth and make a treatment decision based on the following scale: 1) the occlusal surface being sound and "not needing a restoration," 2) the occlusal surface having a subsurface or enamel lesion. No operative treatment was needed at this visit, but special attention was given to this surface at recall visits: "preventive care-defer treatment" and 3) the surface had a carious lesion and "needed a restoration." The teeth were then sectioned in the mesio-distal direction and examined under a stereomicroscope with 10x magnification to determine the true extent of caries. Statistical analysis was conducted by calculating percentages and kappa values of the restorative treatment scores based on examinations by four observers. According to all the observers' treatment decisions, the kappa values were found to be 0.341 (p
doi_str_mv 10.2341/04-173
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Sixty-eight extracted human molars were mounted to perform mouth models with a premolar in contact on both sides. Four observers examined the models in a phantom head, which simulated clinical conditions, using three techniques: unaided visual examination, intraoral camera and operating microscope. The observers were asked to assess the occlusal surface of each tooth and make a treatment decision based on the following scale: 1) the occlusal surface being sound and "not needing a restoration," 2) the occlusal surface having a subsurface or enamel lesion. No operative treatment was needed at this visit, but special attention was given to this surface at recall visits: "preventive care-defer treatment" and 3) the surface had a carious lesion and "needed a restoration." The teeth were then sectioned in the mesio-distal direction and examined under a stereomicroscope with 10x magnification to determine the true extent of caries. Statistical analysis was conducted by calculating percentages and kappa values of the restorative treatment scores based on examinations by four observers. According to all the observers' treatment decisions, the kappa values were found to be 0.341 (p&lt;0.001), 0.471 (p&lt;0.001) and 0.345 (p&lt;0.001) for unaided visual examination, intra-oral camera and operating microscope, respectively. There was a statistically significant difference between the intraoral camera and the other two methods (p&lt;0.05), while there was no significant difference between the unaided visual examination and operating microscope (p&gt;0.05). 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Statistical analysis was conducted by calculating percentages and kappa values of the restorative treatment scores based on examinations by four observers. According to all the observers' treatment decisions, the kappa values were found to be 0.341 (p&lt;0.001), 0.471 (p&lt;0.001) and 0.345 (p&lt;0.001) for unaided visual examination, intra-oral camera and operating microscope, respectively. There was a statistically significant difference between the intraoral camera and the other two methods (p&lt;0.05), while there was no significant difference between the unaided visual examination and operating microscope (p&gt;0.05). 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source MEDLINE; Allen Press Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Bicuspid - pathology
Decision Making
Dental Caries - diagnosis
Dental Caries - pathology
Dental Enamel - pathology
Dental Restoration, Permanent
Dentistry
Diagnosis, Differential
Humans
Microscopy - instrumentation
Molar - pathology
Observer Variation
Photography, Dental - instrumentation
Tooth Crown - pathology
title Restorative treatment decision making with unaided visual examination, intraoral camera and operating microscope
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