| Literature DB >> 31578410 |
Maria Melo1,2, Agustin Pascual1, Isabel Camps1, Fadi Ata-Ali2, Javier Ata-Ali3,4.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the clinical ability of Near-Infrared Light-Transillumination (NILT) for approximal dentinal caries detection and to compare with direct digital-radiography (DDR), as well as to determine whether the combination of both techniques improves the diagnostic capacity of the lesions. From 88 patients (over 18 years), 138 posterior teeth (76 molars and 62 premolars), that had approximal caries reached into dentine determined by DDR, were included. Lesion extension and DDR images were scored as follows: D0 = sound surface, D1/D2 = caries restricted to the outer/inner-half of the enamel, and D3/4 = caries restricted to the outer/inner-half of the dentin. Opening of the approximal surface using 0.5 mm-in-diameter diamond-bar was used as gold-standard. The lesion extension was then determined by the following criteria: no dentinal caries (D0/1/2) or dentinal caries (D3/4). Seventy-one lesions were D3 and 67 lesions were D4. Sensitivities of overall/D3/D4 were 98.0/95.7/100.0 (NILT) and 100/100/100 (DDR), respectively. Correlations with gold-standard were 0.92 (NILT) and 0.42 (DDR), respectively. The correlation increased to 0.97 (p = 0.045) on combining NILT and DDR. There was no difference in sensitivity between the methods (p > 0.05); but was differences in the correlation (p < 0.01). It can be concluded that NILT showed sensitivity similar to that of DDR and higher correlation than DDR for approximal dentinal caries detection. Accordingly, it may be used to monitor the progression of caries without exposing the patient to ionizing radiation, this being of particular interest in growing patients and in pregnant women. In this respect, NILT can be an effective diagnostic tool adjunctive to bitewing radiographs in detecting approximal dentinal caries. The combination of NILT and DDR represents an increase in the diagnosis of approximal lesions The proposed diagnostic protocol comprises visual examination, followed by NILT and DDR only if the former technique detects approximal caries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31578410 PMCID: PMC6775139 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-50850-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Prevalence of D0, D1 and D2 lesions according to ICDAS, DDR and NILT. ICDAS: International Caries Detection and Assessment System.
| ICDAS | DDR | NILT | |
|---|---|---|---|
| D0 | 3400 | 1806 | 1594 |
| D1 | 0 | 82 | 179 |
| D2 | 0 | 128 | 220 |
DDR: Direct digital radiography.
NILT: Near infrared light transillumination.
Overall sensitivity and based on lesion extension, and correlation with histology. Superscript letters indicate there are no significant differences between the methods in sensitivity, but there are differences in the correlation.
| Method | Sensitivity | Correlation | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall (n = 138) | D3 (n = 71) | D4 (n = 67) | ||
| NILT | 98.0a | 95.7a | 100.0a | 0.92a |
| DDR | 100.0a | 100.0a | 100.0a | 0.42b |
| ICDAS | 38.4a | 26.8a | 50.7a | 0.24b |
NILT: Near infrared light transillumination.
DDR: Direct digital radiography.
ap-value < 0.05.
bp-value > 0.001.
Reproducibility of examiners.
| Examiner 1 | Examiner 2 | Interexaminer | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ICDAS | 0.63 (0.54–0.80) | 0.77 (0.57–0.90) | 0.58 (0.33–0.76) |
| DDR | 0.78 (0.62–0.83) | 0.80 (0.55–0.88) | 0.75 (0.69–0.83) |
| NILT | 0.88 (0.67–0.92) | 0.92 (0.74–0.94) | 0.83 (0.71–0.89) |
Figure 1Examples of D3 and D4 lesions for each method: Intraoral image, NILT: Near infrared light transillumination, and DDR: Direct digital radiography. Orange circles indicate the location of lesion. D3 lesion was confirmed on the distal surface of the maxillary left first premolar. D4 lesion was confirmed on the distal surface of the mandibular left first premolar.