Abstract

Panoramic and periapical radiograph tools help dentists in diagnosing the most common dental diseases, such as dental caries. Generally, dental caries is manually diagnosed by dentists based on panoramic and periapical images. For several reasons, such as carelessness caused by heavy workload and inexperience, manual diagnosis may cause unnoticeable dental caries. Thus, computer-based intelligent vision systems supported by machine learning and image processing techniques are needed to prevent these negativities. This study proposed a novel approach for the automatic diagnosis of dental caries based on periapical images. The proposed procedure used a multi-input deep convolutional neural network ensemble (MI-DCNNE) model. Specifically, a score-based ensemble scheme was employed to increase the achievement of the proposed MI-DCNNE method. The inputs to the proposed approach were both raw periapical images and an enhanced form of it. The score fusion was carried out in the Softmax layer of the proposed multi-input CNN architecture. In the experimental works, a periapical image dataset (340 images) covering both caries and non-caries images were used for the performance evaluation of the proposed method. According to the results, it was seen that the proposed model is quite successful in the diagnosis of dental caries. The reported accuracy score is 99.13%. This result shows that the proposed MI-DCNNE model can effectively contribute to the classification of dental caries.

Highlights

  • Dental caries is one of the most common dental diseases

  • This study presented a novel score-based multi-input deep convolutional neural network ensemble to detect dental caries using periapical teeth images

  • The purpose of the present study was to determine the ability of deep convolutional neural networks to assist dentists in the automatic diagnosis of dental caries based on periapical images

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Summary

Introduction

Dental caries is one of the most common dental diseases. Dental caries result from a complex interaction between acid-producing bacteria that adhere to the dental and fermentable carbohydrates. White dot surfaces get pitted, causing small holes called cavities to form. It is typical in children, teenagers, and older adults. If cavities are left untreated, they can grow and affect the deeper layers of your teeth. They can cause severe toothache, infection, and dental loss [1], [2]. The film presents vital information to aid in the diagnosis of the most common dental diseases, especially dental caries, dental abscesses, periodontal bone loss, or gum disease, and shows the teeth and surrounding alveolar bone, all dental coatings, and dental roots.

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