Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Jun 2016

Assessing the Accuracy of Cone-Beam Computerized Tomography in Measuring Thinning Oral and Buccal Bone

MD,
,
DDS, PhD,
MD, PhD, DDS, and
DDS, PhD
Page Range: 311 – 314
DOI: 10.1563/aaid-joi-D-15-00188
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The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy and reliability of cone-beam computerized tomography (CBCT) in measuring thinning bone surrounding dental implants. Three implants were inserted into the mandible of a domestic pig at 6 different bone thicknesses on the vestibular and the lingual sides, and measurements were recorded using CBCT. The results were obtained, analyzed, and compared with areas without implants. Our results indicated that the bone thickness and the neighboring implants decreased the accuracy and reliability of CBCT for measuring bone volume around dental implants. We concluded that CBCT slightly undermeasured the bone thickness around the implant, both buccally and orally, compared with the same thickness without the implant. These results support that using the i-CAT NG with a 0.2 voxel size is not accurate for either qualitative or quantitative bone evaluations, especially when the bone is thinner than 0.72 mm in the horizontal dimension.

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  <sc>Figures</sc>
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Figures 1–7

Figure 1. Implants A, B, and C in the pig mandible. Figure 2. Thinning conditions in the mandible. Figure 3. Thinning in progress. Figure 4. The pig mandible seen in the cone-beam computerized tomography imaging. Figure 5. Close-up of the pig mandible in the cone-beam computerized tomography imaging scan. Figure 6. A single cross-sectional image without the implant at midline. Figure 7. A single cross-sectional image with the implant at midline.


Contributor Notes

Corresponding author, e-mail: barzol34@gmail.com
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