Comparison of a Smartphone-Based Photographic Method with Face-to-Face Caries Assessment: A Mobile Teledentistry Model.

Telemed J E Health

1 International Research Collaborative-Oral Health and Equity: School of Anatomy, Physiology and Human Biology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia .

Published: May 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to assess the effectiveness of using a smartphone camera for remote screening of dental caries through a mobile teledentistry approach.
  • - It involved 100 participants who had their dental images captured via an Android app and sent to a telemedicine server, where off-site dentists evaluated them compared to traditional face-to-face assessments.
  • - Results showed moderate sensitivity (60-63%) for detecting caries with the smartphone method, indicating it could serve as a cost-effective and reliable screening tool in the dental field despite some limitations.

Article Abstract

Objectives: This study sought to evaluate the efficacy of a mobile teledentistry approach using a smartphone camera for remote screening of dental caries.

Materials And Methods: An image acquisition Android App was created to facilitate the acquisition and transmission of dental images to a store-and-forward based telemedicine server. One hundred participants who were attending routine checkups at dental clinics were enrolled in 2014. Following a face-to-face oral screening by a screener (dentist), images of patients' teeth were obtained using a smartphone camera. These images, along with patient information, were then transmitted from the Android App to the server through the Internet for later independent assessment by two charters (off-site dentists). The assessments of these charters were then compared to the benchmark face-to-face caries assessment.

Results: Sensitivity values for the photographic method when compared to the benchmark face-to-face caries assessment were moderate, and ranged from 60% to 63%. Weighted kappa (K) as a measure of intragrader agreement for the photographic assessment was estimated as almost perfect (K = 0.84). The intergrader agreement for the photographic method compared to the face-to-face caries assessment ranged from moderate to substantial (K = 0.54-0.66).

Conclusions: Despite some limitations, the mobile teledentistry approach has shown the potential to detect occlusal caries from photographs taken by a smartphone camera with an acceptable diagnostic performance compared to traditional face-to-face screening. This study suggests that telemedicine and cellular phone technology can be combined to create an inexpensive and reliable screening tool.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/tmj.2016.0122DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

face-to-face caries
16
photographic method
12
caries assessment
12
mobile teledentistry
12
smartphone camera
12
teledentistry approach
8
android app
8
compared benchmark
8
benchmark face-to-face
8
method compared
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!