Abstract

ObjectiveThis study aimed to accurately segment teeth under complex oral conditions, including complex structural interference among adjacent teeth or malocclusion conditions, such as tooth rotation and displacement caused by dental crowding. Study designCone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) images were obtained from 19 patients with complex oral conditions, and a three-step solution was proposed. This study used a global convex level-set model to extract bony tissue and developed a flexible curve extraction method for separating neighbouring teeth under complex structural interference. In addition, a local level-set model with adaptive edge feature enhancement was proposed to segment individual teeth precisely. This model adaptively enhances edge features based on the structure of the root boundary and accurately distinguishes between the close-contact root and alveolar bone resulting from tooth rotation or displacement. ResultsThe experimental results showed that the average Dice similarity coefficient values for incisors, canines, premolars, and molars were 93.30%, 93.47%, 93.24%, and 93.89%, respectively, and the average tooth centroid distances were 0.66, 0.61, 0.87, and 0.80 mm, respectively. ConclusionThe proposed method can effectively segment teeth without relying on highly precise annotated datasets, yielding satisfactory results even under complex structural interference between adjacent teeth or tooth rotation and displacement caused by dental crowding. It is more robust than the other methods and provides valuable data for further research and clinical practice.

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