Paulina Vortkamp, Stefan Rues, Sven Räther, Lydia Eberhard, Alexander Rößler, Frederic Bouffleur, Reinald Kühle, Franz Sebastian Schwindling, Peter Rammelsberg, Christoph J Roser, Christopher Herpel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: Since 1949, occlusal contact area (OCA) has been recognised as an indicator of masticatory performance (MP), but it required individual and laborious analog measurement. Today, a digital workflow could provide automatic quantification.
Objective: To find optimal parameters for a digital evaluation in terms of maximising correlation between OCA and MP.
Methods: MP was measured clinically by comminution of standardised test food by 41 participants (mean age = 29, n female = 28), including 18 patients with dentofacial deformities and 23 healthy subjects with normal occlusion. OCA was measured in the laboratory. After impression taking, gypsum casts were digitised (D2000, 3shape) and aligned in maximum intercuspidation (Geomagic Design X2022, 3D Systems). The maxilla was enlarged with surface offsets of 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, 800 and 2000 μm to simulate different interocclusal distances. OCA was identified at the mandible surface by intersection with the respective enlarged maxilla scan (3D surface area). OCA projection onto the occlusal plane (2D area) was also computed, resulting in a total of 18 different OCA evaluations per patient.
Results: MP was lower in patients with malocclusion than in individuals with normal occlusion (X50 mean 5.35 vs. 4.62). The 18 mean OCAs ranged from 11 to 852 mm2. In subjects with normal occlusion, strong correlations were shown for interocclusal distances between 150 and 300 μm combined with 3D projection (r < -0.7). For patients with malocclusion, no significant correlations were identified.
Conclusions: OCA appears a suitable indicator of MP in individuals with normal occlusion, but not in patients with malocclusion, where other factors seem more determinant.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Oral Rehabilitation aims to be the most prestigious journal of dental research within all aspects of oral rehabilitation and applied oral physiology. It covers all diagnostic and clinical management aspects necessary to re-establish a subjective and objective harmonious oral function.
Oral rehabilitation may become necessary as a result of developmental or acquired disturbances in the orofacial region, orofacial traumas, or a variety of dental and oral diseases (primarily dental caries and periodontal diseases) and orofacial pain conditions. As such, oral rehabilitation in the twenty-first century is a matter of skilful diagnosis and minimal, appropriate intervention, the nature of which is intimately linked to a profound knowledge of oral physiology, oral biology, and dental and oral pathology.
The scientific content of the journal therefore strives to reflect the best of evidence-based clinical dentistry. Modern clinical management should be based on solid scientific evidence gathered about diagnostic procedures and the properties and efficacy of the chosen intervention (e.g. material science, biological, toxicological, pharmacological or psychological aspects). The content of the journal also reflects documentation of the possible side-effects of rehabilitation, and includes prognostic perspectives of the treatment modalities chosen.