Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School Settings

Introduction: Environmental factors, including ambient light, play an important role in caries detection. Dental private practices and dental school clinics are exposed to extraneous light from fluorescent fixtures, operative unit lights and/or windows. In previous studies, visual fatigue and impair...

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Main Authors: Mohammed Alsaati, Thomas Deahl, Marcel Noujeim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JCDR Research and Publications Private Limited 2018-07-01
Series:Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jcdr.net/articles/PDF/11734/34353_CE[Ra]_F(Sh)_PF1(MLS_SHU)_PN(SL).pdf
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spelling doaj-2fd2c6c34743429ea21597da893f80ec2020-11-25T02:02:55ZengJCDR Research and Publications Private LimitedJournal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research2249-782X0973-709X2018-07-01127ZC06ZC1010.7860/JCDR/2018/34353.11734Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School SettingsMohammed Alsaati0Thomas Deahl1Marcel Noujeim2Clinical Instructor, Department of Dental, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, USA.Assistant Professor, Department of Comprehensive Dentistry, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, USA.Professor, Department of Comprehensive Dentistry, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, USA.Introduction: Environmental factors, including ambient light, play an important role in caries detection. Dental private practices and dental school clinics are exposed to extraneous light from fluorescent fixtures, operative unit lights and/or windows. In previous studies, visual fatigue and impaired diagnostic accuracy are found to be associated with the viewing conditions. Aim: The study aims to evaluate and compare dental students’ performance at detecting proximal caries on intraoral digital radiographs, under different ambient light conditions. Materials and Methods: Eight randomly chosen senior dental students and a dentist evaluated intraoral digital images of 32 extracted teeth mounted in 12 quadrants. Almost half of the teeth were carious as confirmed by histology. The illuminance measuring unit (Lux) was used to measure the light conditions at luminous flux per unit area. Raters viewed the images in ambient light conditions i.e., dim light settings (Less than 50 Lux) and in bright light settings (more than 800 Lux). Images were viewed with the same calibrated monitor. All other viewing conditions were controlled. Raters stated their certainty of caries presence on a 5-point scale. Sensitivity, specificity and Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve was calculated for all observations and for both light settings. Results: Raters performed at a higher specificity under dim light conditions (p<0.05). ROC analysis showed that the overall performance under dim light environment was better than the bright light environment (0.745 vs. 0.710), which was statistically significant (p<0.05). Conclusion: The results support reducing ambient light levels to rule out caries, as there is a significantly higher specificity and performance in a dim light environment compared to bright one.https://jcdr.net/articles/PDF/11734/34353_CE[Ra]_F(Sh)_PF1(MLS_SHU)_PN(SL).pdfambient lightcalibrationdigital radiographsilluminancephotometer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed Alsaati
Thomas Deahl
Marcel Noujeim
spellingShingle Mohammed Alsaati
Thomas Deahl
Marcel Noujeim
Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School Settings
Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research
ambient light
calibration
digital radiographs
illuminance
photometer
author_facet Mohammed Alsaati
Thomas Deahl
Marcel Noujeim
author_sort Mohammed Alsaati
title Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School Settings
title_short Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School Settings
title_full Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School Settings
title_fullStr Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School Settings
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Different Lighting Conditions on Proximal Caries Detection in Dental School Settings
title_sort effect of different lighting conditions on proximal caries detection in dental school settings
publisher JCDR Research and Publications Private Limited
series Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research
issn 2249-782X
0973-709X
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Introduction: Environmental factors, including ambient light, play an important role in caries detection. Dental private practices and dental school clinics are exposed to extraneous light from fluorescent fixtures, operative unit lights and/or windows. In previous studies, visual fatigue and impaired diagnostic accuracy are found to be associated with the viewing conditions. Aim: The study aims to evaluate and compare dental students’ performance at detecting proximal caries on intraoral digital radiographs, under different ambient light conditions. Materials and Methods: Eight randomly chosen senior dental students and a dentist evaluated intraoral digital images of 32 extracted teeth mounted in 12 quadrants. Almost half of the teeth were carious as confirmed by histology. The illuminance measuring unit (Lux) was used to measure the light conditions at luminous flux per unit area. Raters viewed the images in ambient light conditions i.e., dim light settings (Less than 50 Lux) and in bright light settings (more than 800 Lux). Images were viewed with the same calibrated monitor. All other viewing conditions were controlled. Raters stated their certainty of caries presence on a 5-point scale. Sensitivity, specificity and Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve was calculated for all observations and for both light settings. Results: Raters performed at a higher specificity under dim light conditions (p<0.05). ROC analysis showed that the overall performance under dim light environment was better than the bright light environment (0.745 vs. 0.710), which was statistically significant (p<0.05). Conclusion: The results support reducing ambient light levels to rule out caries, as there is a significantly higher specificity and performance in a dim light environment compared to bright one.
topic ambient light
calibration
digital radiographs
illuminance
photometer
url https://jcdr.net/articles/PDF/11734/34353_CE[Ra]_F(Sh)_PF1(MLS_SHU)_PN(SL).pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT mohammedalsaati effectofdifferentlightingconditionsonproximalcariesdetectionindentalschoolsettings
AT thomasdeahl effectofdifferentlightingconditionsonproximalcariesdetectionindentalschoolsettings
AT marcelnoujeim effectofdifferentlightingconditionsonproximalcariesdetectionindentalschoolsettings
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