Pulp volume quantification methods in cone-beam computed tomography for age estimation: A critical review and meta-analysis |
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Authors: | Marcella Guedes Barbosa MS Ademir Franco PhD Renata Dantas Barreto de Oliveira MD Mariela Peralta Mamani PhD José Luís Cintra Junqueira PhD Mariana Quirino Silveira Soares PhD |
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Affiliation: | 1. Oral Radiology Division, São Leopoldo Mandic Research Institute, São Paulo, Brazil;2. Forensic Odontology Division, São Leopoldo Mandic Research Institute, São Paulo, Brazil;3. Federal University of Paraíba, João Pessoa, Brazil;4. Faculdade do Centro Oeste Paulista, São Paulo, Brazil |
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Abstract: | The secondary dentin deposition that occurs after the tooth formation process results in a decrease in pulp cavity volume in adolescents and adults. The purpose of this critical review was to correlate pulpal and/or dental volume on cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) with chronological age approximation. A subobjective was to investigate which methodology and CBCT technical parameters would be most appropriate to evaluate this correlation. This critical review followed the PRISMA guidelines, and it was conducted by a search through PubMed, Embase, SciELO, Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane Library databases, as well as gray literature. Primary studies that used pulp volume, or pulp chamber to tooth volume ratio measured using CBCT were included. Seven hundred and eight indexed and 31 non-indexed records were identified. A qualitative analysis was performed including 25 selected studies with a total of 5100 individuals, age ranging from 8 to 87 years without sex predilection. The most used method was pulp volume/tooth volume. CBCT voxel size ranged between 0.09 and 0.5. Manual segmentation associated with threshold algorithms was used in most of the studies. Correlation between the pulp volume/tooth volume ratio was moderate: −0.66 for the upper central incisors, −0.59 for upper canines and −0.56 for lower canines. High heterogeneity was observed among the studies. It is concluded that pulp volume should be used with caution in age estimation. Evidence supports the preferable use of upper incisors with pulp volume/tooth volume ratio for age estimation. There is not enough evidence that voxel size interferes in age estimation by pulp volume. |
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Keywords: | age estimation by teeth cone-beam computed tomography forensic dentistry |
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