Abstract

It is well known that skeletal characteristics vary among different populations. Sex dimorphic characteristics of the mandible have been reported from studies using either mandible bone or computer tomography (CT) scan images of the mandible to test its efficacy in estimating sex. Mandibular studies for estimating sex in any particular population group may not hold well for different populations owing to inherent geographical variations. With this background, we assessed the validity of mandible measurements from CT scan images to determine sex in the South Indian population. As a part of our study, 11 metric parameters and 1 angular parameter were measured and analyzed. The mean values of all the parameters were significantly higher for males as compared to females. Bigonial breadth indicated the best discriminatory ability of the study. Mandibular angle had the least predictive accuracy among all the discriminant functions studied. We further observed that a combination of parameters gave the best overall classification rate (92.3 %). When the same functions were tested on an independent testing data set, a combination of parameters and bigonial breadth gave the best classification rate (82.1 %) which was consistent. We concluded that the mandible has a high accuracy for sex estimation. All the parameters studied demonstrated statistically significant differences between the two sexes except the mandibular angle.

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