1. Reproducibility of 3 different tracing methods based on cone beam computed tomography in determining the anatomical position of the mandibular canal.
- Author
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Gerlach NL, Meijer GJ, Maal TJ, Mulder J, Rangel FA, Borstlap WA, and Bergé SJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cephalometry methods, Female, Humans, Jaw, Edentulous diagnostic imaging, Male, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Mandible innervation, Middle Aged, Observer Variation, Radiography, Panoramic methods, Reproducibility of Results, Software, Young Adult, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography methods, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Mandibular Nerve anatomy & histology, Mandibular Nerve diagnostic imaging, Radiology Information Systems
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the reproducibility of 3 different tracing methods to determine a reliable method to define the proper anatomical position of the mandibular canal based on cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) data., Materials and Methods: Five dentate and 5 edentate patients were selected at random from the CBCT database. Two independent observers traced both the left and the right mandibular canal using 3-dimensional image-based planning software (Procera System NobelGuide; Nobel Biocare, Göteborg, Sweden). All mandibular canals were traced using 3 different methods. Method I was based on coronal views, also known as cross-sections. Panorama-like reconstructions were the starting point for method II. The third method combined methods I and II., Results: With respect to interobserver reliability, no significant difference (P = .34) for the various methods was observed. The reproducibility was better in edentate than in dentate jaws (P = .0015). The difference between 2 tracings was the lowest for the combined method: within a range of 1.3 mm in 95% of the course of the canal. The most obvious deviations were mainly seen in the anterior part of the canal., Conclusions: The best reproducible method for mandibular canal tracing is the combined method III. Between observers, still a mean 95th percentile deviation threshold of 1.3 mm (SD 0.384) is noted, indicating that a safety zone of 1.7 mm should be respected. When planning surgery on CBCT-based data, surgeons should be aware of the obvious deviations located in the region of the anterior loop of the canal., (2010 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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