Abstract

ObjectivesImages derived from cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) scans lack detailed information on the dentition and interocclusal relationships needed for proper surgical planning and production of surgical splints. To get a proper representation of the dentition, integration of a digital dental model into the CBCT scan is necessary. The aim of this study was to validate a simplified protocol to integrate digital dental models into CBCT scans using only one scan.Materials and methodsConventional protocol A used one combined upper and lower impression and two CBCT scans. The new protocol B included placement of ten markers on the gingiva, one CBCT scan, and two separate impressions of the upper and lower dentition. Twenty consecutive patients, scheduled for mandibular advancement surgery, were included. To validate protocol B, 3-dimensional reconstructions were made, which were compared by calculating the mean intersurface distances obtained with both protocols.ResultsThe mean distance for all patients for the upper jaw is 0.39 mm and for the lower jaw is 0.30 mm. For ten out of 20 patients, all distances were less than 1 mm. For the other ten patients, all distances were less than 2 mm.ConclusionsMean distances of 0.39 and 0.30 mm are clinically acceptable and comparable to other studies; therefore, this new protocol is clinically accurate.Clinical relevanceThis new protocol seems to be clinically accurate. It is less time consuming, gives less radiation exposure for the patient, and has a lower risk for positional errors of the impressions compared to other integration protocols.

Highlights

  • In maxillofacial imaging, creating three-dimensional (3D) digital datasets has become the standard

  • Most researchers and clinicians agree that images derived from cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) scans do not provide enough detailed information about the dentition and interocclusal relationships for treatment planning purposes

  • CBCT scans are still subject to artifacts at the level of the dentition

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Summary

Introduction

In maxillofacial imaging, creating three-dimensional (3D) digital datasets has become the standard. That the integration of different datasets is established [1,2,3], treatment planning in maxillofacial surgery has shifted to a digital 3D approach. Most researchers and clinicians agree that images derived from cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) scans do not provide enough detailed information about the dentition and interocclusal relationships for treatment planning purposes. This is because of the limited scanning resolution and streak artifacts caused by radiopaque dental restorations or orthodontic brackets [3, 6,7,8,9,10,11]. To obtain a proper representation of the dentition, integration of a digital dental model into the CBCT scan is necessary

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