| Literature DB >> 35437507 |
Giuseppe Minervini1, Diana Russo1, Alan Scott Herford2, Francesca Gorassini3, Aida Meto4, Cesare D'Amico3, Gabriele Cervino3, Marco Cicciù3, Luca Fiorillo1,3,4.
Abstract
Telemedicine is a subunit of telehealth, and it uses telecommunication technology, video, digital images, and electronic medical records to allow the exchange of clinical information and images over remote distances for dental consultation, diagnosis, and treatment planning. Dental clinical practice requires face-to-face interaction with the patients, and therefore, during the COVID-19 pandemic, it has mostly been suspended. In this view, teledentistry offers the opportunity to continue dental practice, avoiding the face-to-face examination that put patients and healthcare professionals at infection risk. Teledentistry encompasses several subunits such as teleconsultation, telediagnosis, telemonitoring, and teletriage. To date, there are several experiences described in literature that suggest that teledentistry could be applied to support traditional care of different oral diseases. However, there are some issues that need to be addressed. Reimbursement concerns, costs, license regulations, limits in physical examinations, and expert equipment are principal issues that should be overcome in telemedicine and in teledentistry. In this narrative review, we provide an overview of the different teledentistry approaches in the care of patients with dental and temporomandibular disorders, as well as discussing the issues that need to be addressed to implement this approach in clinical practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35437507 PMCID: PMC9013296 DOI: 10.1155/2022/7091153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.246
Summary of the studies discussed.
| Authors | Title | Subunit | Modality | Oral disease | Primary outcome reached | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Petruzzi and De Benedittis | WhatsApp: a telemedicine platform for facilitating remote oral medicine consultation and improving clinical examinations | Teleconsultation/telediagnosis | Mobile health care services | Malignant and benign oral lesions | Yes | Comparison with the clinicopathologic diagnosis/sample size | No regulation and standardization of quality images |
| Ignatius and Perälä | Use of videoconferencing for consultation in dental prosthetics and oral rehabilitation | Teleconsultation | Synchronous | Prosthetic or oral rehabilitation treatment | Yes | — | Small sample size |
| Salazar-Fernandez et al. | Telemedicine as an effective tool for the management of temporomandibular joint disorders | Teleconsultation | Asynchronous | TMJD | Yes | Multicenter/sample size | — |
| Exposto et al. | Remote physical examination for temporomandibular disorders | Teleconsultation/telediagnosis | Synchronous | Myalgia and arthralgia due to TMJD | Yes | Comparison with standard examination | Small sample size |
| Carrard et al. | Telediagnosis of oral lesions in primary care: the EstomatoNet Program | Telediagnosis | Asynchronous | Malignant and benign oral lesions | — | Sample size | No comparison with standard examination |
| AlShaya et al. | Reliability of mobile phone teledentistry in dental diagnosis and treatment planning in mixed dentition | Telediagnosis | Asynchronous | Dental caries | Yes | Examination of the oral cavity based on WHO criteria/comparison with standard examination | Restricted age group 6–9 years (no data on permanent teeth) |
| Kohara et al. | Is it feasible to use smartphone images to perform telediagnosis of different stages of occlusal caries lesions? | Telediagnosis | Asynchronous | Dental caries | Yes | Comparison with standard examination | All the photographic images were taken by the same operator |
| Sunny et al. | A smart tele-cytology point-of-care platform for oral cancer screening | Telediagnosis | Asynchronous | Oral malignant lesions | Yes | Comparison with conventional cytology | Small sample size |
| Estai et al. | Teledentistry as a novel pathway to improve dental health in school children: a research protocol for a randomised controlled trial | Teletriage | Asynchronous | Dental care | Study ongoing | Comparison with standard examination | — |
| Kopycka-Kedzierawski et al. | Dental screening of preschool children using teledentistry: a feasibility study | Teletriage | Asynchronous | Dental care | Yes | Comparison with standard examination | Restricted to preschool children |
| Kopycka-Kedzierawski and McLaren | Advancement of teledentistry at the University of Rochester's Eastman Institute for Oral Health | Teletriage | Synchronous | Dental care | Ongoing | Sample size | No comparison with standard examination |
| Brucoli et al. | The use of teleradiology for triaging of maxillofacial trauma | Teletriage | Asynchronous | Maxillofacial trauma | Yes | Comparison with standard examination | — |
| Giudice et al. | Can teledentistry improve the monitoring of patients during the Covid-19 dissemination? | Telemonitoring | Mobile health care services | Oral diseases | N/A | — | No comparison with standard examination |
TMJD: temporomandibular joint disorder; N/A: not applicable; WHO: World Health Organization.