In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and Dentin

The crown of a human tooth has an outer layer of highly-mineralized tissue called enamel, beneath which is dentin, a less-mineralized tissue which forms the bulk of the tooth-crown and root. The composition and structure of enamel and dentin are different, resulting in different thermal properties....

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Main Authors: Paula Lancaster, David Brettle, Fiona Carmichael, Val Clerehugh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2017.00461/full
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spelling doaj-47a79bd406d44224b4b48d877cc156a82020-11-24T21:43:42ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2017-07-01810.3389/fphys.2017.00461270612In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and DentinPaula Lancaster0David Brettle1Fiona Carmichael2Val Clerehugh3Restorative Department, School of Dentistry, University of LeedsLeeds, United KingdomDepartment of Medical Physics and Engineering, St. James's University HospitalLeeds, United KingdomDepartment of Dental and Maxillofacial Radiology, Leeds Dental Institute, University of LeedsLeeds, United KingdomRestorative Department, School of Dentistry, University of LeedsLeeds, United KingdomThe crown of a human tooth has an outer layer of highly-mineralized tissue called enamel, beneath which is dentin, a less-mineralized tissue which forms the bulk of the tooth-crown and root. The composition and structure of enamel and dentin are different, resulting in different thermal properties. This gives an opportunity to characterize enamel and dentin from their thermal properties and to visually present the findings as a thermal map. The thermal properties of demineralized enamel and dentin may also be sufficiently different from sound tissue to be seen on a thermal map, underpinning future thermal assessment of caries. The primary aim of this novel study was to produce a thermal map of a sound, human tooth-slice to visually characterize enamel and dentin. The secondary aim was to map a human tooth-slice with demineralized enamel and dentin to consider future diagnostic potential of thermal maps for caries-detection. Two human slices of teeth, one sound and one demineralized from a natural carious lesion, were cooled on ice, then transferred to a hotplate at 30°C where the rewarming-sequence was captured by an infra-red thermal camera. Calculation of thermal diffusivity and thermal conductivity was undertaken, and two methods of data-processing used customized software to produce thermal maps from the thermal characteristic-time-to-relaxation and heat-exchange. The two types of thermal maps characterized enamel and dentin. In addition, sound and demineralized enamel and dentin were distinguishable within both maps. This supports thermal assessment of caries and requires further investigation on a whole tooth.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2017.00461/fulldental enameldental dentindental cariesdemineralizationthermal imagingthermal map
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paula Lancaster
David Brettle
Fiona Carmichael
Val Clerehugh
spellingShingle Paula Lancaster
David Brettle
Fiona Carmichael
Val Clerehugh
In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and Dentin
Frontiers in Physiology
dental enamel
dental dentin
dental caries
demineralization
thermal imaging
thermal map
author_facet Paula Lancaster
David Brettle
Fiona Carmichael
Val Clerehugh
author_sort Paula Lancaster
title In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and Dentin
title_short In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and Dentin
title_full In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and Dentin
title_fullStr In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and Dentin
title_full_unstemmed In-vitro Thermal Maps to Characterize Human Dental Enamel and Dentin
title_sort in-vitro thermal maps to characterize human dental enamel and dentin
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2017-07-01
description The crown of a human tooth has an outer layer of highly-mineralized tissue called enamel, beneath which is dentin, a less-mineralized tissue which forms the bulk of the tooth-crown and root. The composition and structure of enamel and dentin are different, resulting in different thermal properties. This gives an opportunity to characterize enamel and dentin from their thermal properties and to visually present the findings as a thermal map. The thermal properties of demineralized enamel and dentin may also be sufficiently different from sound tissue to be seen on a thermal map, underpinning future thermal assessment of caries. The primary aim of this novel study was to produce a thermal map of a sound, human tooth-slice to visually characterize enamel and dentin. The secondary aim was to map a human tooth-slice with demineralized enamel and dentin to consider future diagnostic potential of thermal maps for caries-detection. Two human slices of teeth, one sound and one demineralized from a natural carious lesion, were cooled on ice, then transferred to a hotplate at 30°C where the rewarming-sequence was captured by an infra-red thermal camera. Calculation of thermal diffusivity and thermal conductivity was undertaken, and two methods of data-processing used customized software to produce thermal maps from the thermal characteristic-time-to-relaxation and heat-exchange. The two types of thermal maps characterized enamel and dentin. In addition, sound and demineralized enamel and dentin were distinguishable within both maps. This supports thermal assessment of caries and requires further investigation on a whole tooth.
topic dental enamel
dental dentin
dental caries
demineralization
thermal imaging
thermal map
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2017.00461/full
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