Literature DB >> 32221445

Evaluation of the assessment of tooth wear by general dental practitioners.

Mark O'Hara1, Brian J Millar2.   

Abstract

Aim To evaluate currently available methods for assessing and monitoring tooth wear in a general dental practice environment.Method A questionnaire was developed and used to obtain data. Models were used to test the dentists' assessment of tooth wear. Ethical permission was obtained.Results Twenty general dental practitioners were interviewed and 100% were aware of the use of study models, 50% about the use of photographs and 45% of the BEWE. Methods used to assess and monitor tooth wear were study models (75%), photographs (65%), BEWE (10%), Smith & Knight index (0%) and no method (15%). Sixty-five percent of dentists were unaware of any guidelines on monitoring tooth wear. In comparing serial photographs, no participant correctly identified all the wear changes and 25% thought a change had occurred when one hadn't. Statistical analysis showed a sensitivity of only 73% with a specificity of 75%. In comparing serial study models (same cases as used in the photographs), 55% of participants identified a change when no change occurred and 50-60% of participants were able to correctly identify if wear had or had not occurred. Participants graded the models according to BEWE. Statistical analysis of these results shows a sensitivity of just 69% with a specificity of only 55%. The inter-operator agreement (Fliess' Kappa) showed an even lower degree of agreement was found with only 0.12, which suggests only a slight level of agreement, less than that with photographs.Conclusion Dentists do not seem to be aware of the current guidelines but do make reasonable attempts to monitor tooth wear. None of the currently available methods are ideal and even the use of serial study models is open to much inter-operator variability.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32221445     DOI: 10.1038/s41415-020-1314-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br Dent J        ISSN: 0007-0610            Impact factor:   1.626


  2 in total

1.  Objective assessment of simulated non-carious cervical lesion by tridimensional digital scanning.

Authors:  Caroline de F Charamba; James Needy; Peter S Ungar; Frederico B de Sousa; George J Eckert; Anderson T Hara
Journal:  Clin Oral Investig       Date:  2021-01-19       Impact factor: 3.573

2.  A digital method for wear volume loss analysis using a single-scan three-dimensional dataset.

Authors:  Jae-Hyun Lee; Gerelmaa Myagmar; Ho-Beom Kwon; Jung-Suk Han
Journal:  J Dent Sci       Date:  2021-07-04       Impact factor: 2.080

  2 in total

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