| Literature DB >> 28382560 |
Michael Dau1, Paul Marciak2, Bial Al-Nawas2, Henning Staedt3, Abdulmonem Alshiri4, Bernhard Frerich5, Peer Wolfgang Kämmerer5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A comparison of panoramic radiography (PAN) alone and PAN together with small field of view cone beam computed tomography (sFOV-CBCT) for diagnosis of symptomatic pathologies of the maxillary sinus was carried out by clinicians of different experience.Entities:
Keywords: Cone beam computed tomography; Education; Incidental radiographic findings; Maxillary sinus site; Panoramic radiography; Subjective rating
Year: 2017 PMID: 28382560 PMCID: PMC5382121 DOI: 10.1186/s40729-017-0075-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Implant Dent ISSN: 2198-4034
Fig. 1a Panoramic radiography with area of interest (maxillary sinus) and b, c examples of corresponding images in cone beam computed tomography
Fig. 2a Panoramic radiography with area of interest (maxillary sinus) and b, c examples of corresponding images in cone beam computed tomography
Results of the question “Based on PAN, the clinical area of interest, is…”
| Question | General practitioner ( | Junior maxillofacial surgeon ( | Senior maxillofacial surgeon ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 = good visibility and can be evaluated | 3 (5.4%) | 5 (8.9%) | 13 (15.5%) |
|
| 2 = visible but cannot be evaluated | 19 (33.9%) | 22 (39.3%) | 38 (45.2%) | |
| 3 = not visible | 34 (60.7%) | 29 (51.8%) | 33 (39.3%) |
*One-way ANOVA test with post hoc Tukey B: GP versus MS1 p = 0.034, MS1 versus MS2 p = 0.211, and GP versus MS2 p = 0.001
Results of the question “An additional sFOV-CBCT of the clinical area of interest is…”
| Question | General practitioner ( | Junior maxillofacial surgeon ( | Senior maxillofacial surgeon ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 = required | 14 (25.0%) | 21 (37.5%) | 18 (21.4%) |
|
| 2 = reasonable | 41 (73.2%) | 32 (57.1%) | 50 (59.5%) | |
| 3 = not required | 1 (1.8%) | 3 (5.4%) | 16 (19.0%) |
*One-way ANOVA test with post hoc Tukey B: GP versus MS1 p = 0.369, MS1 versus MS2 p = 0.006, and GP versus MS2 p = 0.038
Number of additional incidental findings in PAN and sFOV-CBCT not related to the sinus disease that led to the radiographic examination
| Number of cases | General practitioner ( | Junior maxillofacial surgeon ( | Senior maxillofacial surgeon ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of incidental findings in PAN | ||||
| ( | 1.5 ± 1.3 | 1.6 ± 1.1 | 2.1 ± 1.5 |
|
| Number of additional, incidental findings in sFOV-CBCT | ||||
| ( | 0.7 ± 0.5 | 0.6 ± 0.5 | 0.7 ± 0.7 |
|
*One-way ANOVA test
Description of incidental findings in PAN not related to the sinus disease that led to the radiographic examination
| Additional incidental findings in panoramic radiography | Relative incidence (%) in relation to total number of therapy affecting findings |
|---|---|
| Retained third molar/follicular cyst | 22 |
| Insufficient root filling | 21 |
| Caries/insufficient filling of teeth | 19 |
| Apical ostitis | 17 |
| Remaining root remnants | 9 |
| Periodontal bone loss | 8 |
| Anatomic particularities (enlargement of the mental foramen/retromolar foramen/bifid nerve) | 4 |
Results of the question “Is there an additional clinical value of sFOV-CBCT?”
| Question | General practitioner ( | Junior maxillofacial surgeon ( | Senior maxillofacial surgeon ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 = it showed no additional information | 2 (3.6%) | 5 (8.9%) | 15 (17.9%) |
|
| 2 = it was useful | 16 (28.6%) | 23 (41.1%) | 23 (27.4%) | |
| 3 = it was affecting therapy | 38 (67.8%) | 28 (50.0%) | 46 (54.8%) |
*One-way ANOVA test with post hoc Tukey B: GP versus MS1 p = 0.002, MS1 versus MS2 p = 0.890, and GP versus MS2 p = 0.001