Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8963582 | Journal of Cranio-Maxillofacial Surgery | 2018 | 31 Pages |
Abstract
The present study compared the reliability of a low-cost laser scanner device to an already-validated stereophotogrammetric instrument. Fifty volunteers underwent duplicate facial scans through laser scanner and stereophotogrammetry. Intra- and inter-instrument reproducibility of linear distances, angles, facial surface area and volume was verified through the Bland-Altman test and calculation of absolute (TEM) and relative (rTEM) technical errors of measurement; rTEM was then classified as follows: <1% excellent; 1-3.9% very good; 4-6.9% good; 7-9.9% moderate; >10% poor. The scans performed through different devices were registered and superimposed to calculate the root mean square (RMS) (point-to-point) distance between the two surfaces. The same protocol was applied to a mannequin head. In inter-instruments comparison, 12/26 measurements showed a “good” rTEM; 5 were “very good”. In intra-instrument comparison, most performances worsened, with only 10 of 26 measurements classified as “good” and “very good”. All the measurements made on mannequin scans were at least “good”, and 14/26 were “very good”. Surface area was “very good” only in intra-instrument comparison; conversely, volumes were poorly repeatable for all the comparisons. On average, RMS point-to-point distances were 0.65Â mm (inter-devices comparison), 0.56Â mm (mannequin scans), 0.42Â mm (intra-device comparison). In conclusion, the low-cost laser scan device can be reliably applied to inanimate objects, but does not meet the standards for three-dimensional facial acquisition on living persons.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
Authors
Daniele Gibelli, Valentina Pucciarelli, Zuzana Caplova, Annalisa Cappella, Claudia Dolci, Cristina Cattaneo, Chiarella Sforza,