| Literature DB >> 35667883 |
David MacDonald1, Sabina Reitzik2.
Abstract
COVID-19, the most recent and globally impactful zoonotic viral pandemic in the last 20 years, has now entered its third year. As the global dental profession returns to providing as full a range of services as possible, in addition to embedding the new infection-control processes that were developed for this pandemic, it should also take full advantage of digital conventional radiology (intraoral, extraoral, and panoramic radiography) and cone-beam computed tomography. Regardless of vaccinations, new or yet-to-manifest variants, and testing, some dentists may be working in communities where the asymptomatic but potentially infectious patient poses a real risk. This needs to be met with not only the whole COVID-19 panoply the dentist is already too familiar with but also the need to minimise aerosol generation production by dental radiography. A flowchart and a table that compares the attributes of the above modalities are included.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cone-beam computed tomography; Radiography; Radiology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35667883 PMCID: PMC9166288 DOI: 10.1016/j.identj.2022.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Dent J ISSN: 0020-6539 Impact factor: 2.607
Fig. 1Flowchart identifying the imaging modalities that may be available in dental offices and their application in patients presenting with a clinically indicated need for radiography and their COVID-19 status. CBCT, cone-beam computed tomography; FOV, field of view; PPE, personal protective equipment. This figure is a development of Figure 1 in MacDonald et al.
A comparison of the attributes of 5 radiologic modalities now used in dentistry.
| Feature | IBWs | EBWs, Segmental DPR | DPR | CBCT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Availability | Most dental office | Available in most modern DPR units | Most dental offices | Still fewer dental offices |
| SR (fine detail) | Best for caries | Posteriorly focussed proximally optimised for interproximal surfaces of posterior teeth and therefore better than DPR for caries | Moderate: Most units not good enough for caries, but adequate for review of the entire jaws and upper neck | Least: But choose best SR (0.076-0.09 mm voxel size) for endodontics, impacted teeth, and small lesions |
| Diagnostic efficiency | Best for most studies of individual teeth | Equivalent to IBW on basis of in vitro studies | Reveals entire jaws, from condyle to condyle and lower half of sinus to upper neck | Best when cross-sectional information required |
| Need for awareness of incidental findings | Nothing beyond crowns and cervical half of roots | Supernumeraries, lesions in lower sinus, posterior body of mandible and upper neck | Same as EBWs and condyles, ramus and anterior sextant | Particularly of base of skull and vertebrae in large FOVs |
| Reduced patient compliance | Children and gaggers and those prone to coughing | Most current units require the patient to be standing or seated vertically; therefore, not ideal for elderly and sick patients | ||
| Aerosol production likelihood | Highest because of the above need to bag/barrier receptors | Least, since nothing enters the oral cavity | ||
| Positioning artefact likelihood | High | Low to moderate | Low to moderate | Low to moderate |
| Movement artefact likelihood | Minimal: short exposure time | Moderate | Moderate: circa 14-16 seconds | High: up to 30 seconds |
| Metal artefact likelihood | None | Provided patient properly prepared and positioned | Provided patient properly prepared and positioned | Greatest likelihood |
| Ghosting artefact likelihood | None | Moderate | Moderate to high | Low |
| Cross-sectional display | None | None | None | Best |
| Optimal indications | Caries and periodontal pocketing | Posteriorly focussed proximally optimised for interproximal surfaces of posterior teeth and thus better for caries | Panoramic view of jaws, particularly in patients with multiple or complex pathology | Complex or retreated endodontics and impacted teeth |
| Radiation dose imparted | Least | Greater than IBW and lower than DPR | Equivalent to 4 IBWs | Highest even with small FOVs |
| Other relevant comments | Phosphor plates have a wider dynamic range than solid state (CCD and CMOS) receptors | 1. 2 EBW images instead of 4 IBWs | Anterior focal trough is narrower in many units and vertebral column is superimposed on it = artefacts | Requires technical expertise and experience particularly with small FOVs |
CBCT, cone-beam computed tomography; CCD, charge-couple device; CMOS, complementary metal-oxide semiconductor; DPR, dental panoramic radiograph; EBW, extraoral bitewing; FOV, field of view; IBW, intraoral bitewing; SR, spatial resolution.
This table is a development of Table III in MacDonald et al.
Fig. 2Extraoral bitewing of a child. It, unlike the dental panoramic radiograph, is posteriorly focussed and proximally optimised for interproximal surfaces of posterior teeth. It is therefore better than dental panoramic radiography for identifying caries.
Fig. 3a, A periapical radiographic display of a previously endodontically treated left maxillary molar. The recurrence of the infection is due to a second mesiobuccal root canal, which was previously missed. b, c, and d represent the 4-cm diameter field-of-view cone-beam computed tomography of this molar. The radiolucency encompasses the mesiobuccal root from apex to the alveolar crest. The cause is a missed second mesiobuccal canal as is clear in b, where only one canal has been filled. The relationship of the lesion with the adjacent anatomy, the floor of the maxillary sinus, is also displayed.
Fig. 4A medium-sized field of view (cone-beam computed tomography [CBCT] of a neoplasm affecting the anterior sextant of the maxilla extending backwards into the posterior sextant and the anterior wall of the left maxillary sinus. (a) represents the multiplanar reconstruction (MPR), whereas (b) represents the “curved” or “panoramic” or formerly the Dentoscan reconstruction. Each reconstruction displays different aspects of the lesion. The MPR is the default reconstruction for most CBCT software, whereas the “curved” reconstruction is manually generated by first plotting out the alveolar arch on the axial reconstruction from which the panoramic and transaxial reconstruction are generated. The lesion is an odontogenic keratocyst, also known as a keratocytocystic odontogenic tumour. See MacDonald D. Oral and maxillofacial radiology: a diagnostic approach. 2nd Edn. British Columbia: Wiley-Blackwell. 2020.