Author:
Silvertown Josh D.,Abrams Stephen H.,Sivagurunathan Koneswaran S.,Kennedy Julia,Jeon Jinseok,Mandelis Andreas,Hellen Adam,Hellen Warren,Elman Gary,Ehrlich Richard,Chouljian Raffy,Finer Yoav,Amaechi Bennett T.
Abstract
Introduction:A clinical study was initiated to investigate a caries detection device (The Canary System (CS)), based on photothermal radiometry and modulated luminescence (PTR-LUM). The primary objective of this study was to determine if PTR-LUM values (in the form of Canary Numbers; CN) correlate with International Caries Diagnostic and Assessment System (ICDAS II) scores and clinical situations. The secondary objectives of this study were to monitor the safety of PTR-LUM, and collect data to determine how CN values could be used to differentiate healthy from decayed tooth surfaces on a normalized scale.Methods:The trial was a four site, non-blinded study. Data was collected from 92 patients, resulting in 842 scanned tooth surfaces over multiple appointments. Surfaces were assessed according to ICDAS II, and further stratified into five clinical situation categories: 1) healthy surface, 2) non-cavitated white and/or brown spots; 3) caries lesions; 4) cavitation and 5) teeth undergoing remineralization therapy.CN data was analyzed separately for smooth and occlusal surfaces. Using a semi-logarithmic graph to plot raw CN (rCN) and normalized (CN) values, rCN data was normalized into a scale of 0-100.Results:Linear correlations (R2) between CN and ICDAS II groupings for smooth and occlusal surfaces were calculated as 0.9759 and 0.9267, respectively. The mean CN values derived from smooth (20.2±0.6) and occlusal (19±1.0) surfaces identified as healthy had significantly lower CN values (P<0.05) compared with the values from the other clinical situation categories. No adverse events were reported.Conclusion:The present study demonstrated the safety of PTR-LUM for clinical application and its ability to distinguish sound from carious tooth surfaces. A clear shift from the baseline in both PTR and LUM in carious enamel was observed depending on the type and nature of the lesion, and correlated to ICDAS II classification codes, which enabled the preliminary development of a Canary Scale.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Reference47 articles.
1. Dove SB. Radiographic diagnosis of dental caries. J Dent Educ 2001; 65 (10) : 985-90.
2. Pretty IA, Maupomé G. A closer look at diagnosis in clinical dental practice: Part 3. Effectiveness of radiographic diagnostic procedures. J Can Dent Assoc 2004; 70 (6) : 388-94.
3. Jan J, Wan Bakar WZ, Mathews SM, et al. Proximal caries lesion detection using the Canary Caries Detection System: An in vitro study. J Investig Clin Dent 2016; 7 (4) : 383-90.
4. Garcia JA, Mandelis A, Abrams SH, Matvienko A. Photothermal radiometry and modulated luminescence: Applications for dental caries detection. In: Jurgen Popp VV, Chiou A, Heinemann S, Eds. Handbook of Biophotonics Photonics for Health Care Part 2 1st ed. 2013; 1047-52.
5. Matvienko A, Jeon J, Mandelis A, et al. Dental biothermophotonics: A quantitative photothermal analysis of early dental demineralization. Eur Phys J Spec Top 2008; 153 (1) : 463-5.
Cited by
11 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献