
Proceedings Paper
Guided fluorescence diagnosis of childhood caries: preliminary measures correlate with depth of carious decayFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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Paper Abstract
The current rise in childhood caries worldwide has increased the demand for portable technologies that can quickly and
accurately detect and diagnose early stage carious lesions. These lesions, if identified at an early stage, can be reversed
with remineralization treatments, education, and improvements in home care. A multi-modal optical prototype for
detecting and diagnosing occlusal caries demineralization in vivo has been developed and pilot tested. The device uses a
405-nm laser as a scanned illumination source to obtain high resolution and high surface contrast reflectance images,
which allows the user to quickly image and screen for any signs of demineralized enamel. When a suspicious region is
located, the device can be switched to perform dual laser fluorescence spectroscopy using 405-nm and 532-nm laser
excitations. These spectra are used to compute an auto-fluorescence (AF) ratio of the suspicious region and the percent
difference of AF ratios from a healthy region of the same tooth. The device was tested on 7 children’s teeth in vivo with
clinically diagnosed carious lesions. Lesion depth was then visually estimated from the video image using the 405-nm
scanned light source, and within a month the maximum drill depth was assessed by a clinician. The researcher and
clinicians were masked from previous measurements in a blinded study protocol. Preliminary results show that the
ratiometric percent difference measurement of the AF spectrum of the tooth correlates with the severity of the
demineralization as assessed by the clinician after drilling.
Paper Details
Date Published: 18 February 2014
PDF: 9 pages
Proc. SPIE 8929, Lasers in Dentistry XX, 892904 (18 February 2014); doi: 10.1117/12.2041648
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8929:
Lasers in Dentistry XX
Peter Rechmann; Daniel Fried, Editor(s)
PDF: 9 pages
Proc. SPIE 8929, Lasers in Dentistry XX, 892904 (18 February 2014); doi: 10.1117/12.2041648
Show Author Affiliations
Mari-Alina Timoshchuk, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Liang Zhang, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Brian A. Dickinson, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Jeremy S. Ridge, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Amy S. Kim, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Liang Zhang, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Brian A. Dickinson, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Jeremy S. Ridge, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Amy S. Kim, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Camille T. Baltuck, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Leonard Y. Nelson, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Joel H. Berg, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Eric J. Seibel, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Leonard Y. Nelson, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Joel H. Berg, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Eric J. Seibel, Univ. of Washington (United States)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8929:
Lasers in Dentistry XX
Peter Rechmann; Daniel Fried, Editor(s)
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