Dental drill noise reduction using a commercially-available earplug device.

Prim Dent J

Faculty of Dentistry, Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, King's College London, UK.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explores the impact of dental handpiece noise on patients and staff, highlighting it as a key factor in dental phobia and potential hearing loss.
  • The research evaluates the effectiveness of a specific anti-noise device, QuietOn, using a simulation setup that mimics human ear characteristics to test its noise reduction capabilities.
  • Findings reveal that while QuietOn is effective in reducing low-frequency noise, it fails to diminish high-frequency dental handpiece noise and interferes with verbal communication, indicating a need for improved noise-cancellation solutions.

Article Abstract

Aim: The dental handpiece noise in a dental surgery is concerning to both patients and staff as a major cause of dental phobia in patients and potential hearing loss in clinical staff. High-frequency noise generated by dental handpieces is considered to be the worst of the many noises in a dental clinic. Methods to reduce this noise have been proposed and either passive or active noise reduction headphones are often suggested. However, in a dental surgery environment, the need for good verbal communication with the patient needs to be maintained. As a result, this paper aims to evaluate one proprietary anti-noise device considered suitable for this specific purpose.

Methods: Lab-based experiments were set up and carried out to evaluate QuietOn, using GRAS 43AG-1 Ear and Cheek Simulator to mimic a section of the human head and ear to represent the acoustic characteristics of an actual ear. Two types of dental drill noise recordings, one for electric motor-driven and another one for air turbine-driven, were played back through high-definition speakers. Sound data captured by the simulator are then visualised and plotted using MATLAB for analysis.

Main Findings: QuietOn is effective at low frequencies (< 1kHz). However, when dealing with high-frequency noise such as dental handpieces it is ineffective yet subdues verbal communication.

Conclusions: Further development of passive or active noise cancellation earplugs is still needed to target dental handpiece noise while maintaining verbal communication.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20501684231155962DOI Listing

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