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The effect of scanning the palate and scan body position on the accuracy of complete‐arch implant scans
Author(s) -
Mizumoto Ryan M.,
Alp Gülce,
Özcan Mutlu,
Yilmaz Burak
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
clinical implant dentistry and related research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.338
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1708-8208
pISSN - 1523-0899
DOI - 10.1111/cid.12821
Subject(s) - image stitching , scanner , implant , position (finance) , significant difference , orthodontics , medicine , nuclear medicine , dentistry , computer science , computer vision , artificial intelligence , surgery , finance , economics
Background Whether stitching the palate during intraoral digital scans of implants would improve, scanning accuracy is unclear. Purpose Evaluate the effect of stitching the palate and the scan body position on the trueness (distance and angular deviation) and precision of digital scans in a completely edentulous situation. Materials and Methods An edentulous maxillary model with four parallel dental implant analogs was fabricated and intraoral scan bodies were attached. The entire surface was scanned using an industrial scanner to generate a master reference model digital scan (MRM‐DS). Digital scans of the master model were made using an intraoral scanner and the resulting scans were divided into two groups [stitched palate (S) and unstitched palate (U)]. All test scans were converted to STL files and superimposed over the MRM‐DS. Results For trueness, scan body position had a significant effect on distance ( P < .001) and angular ( P < .001) deviation values. In terms of precision, no significant difference was found in distance ( P = .051) and angular deviations ( P = .36) between stitched and unstitched techniques. Conclusions The accuracy and precision of digital scans of edentulous maxillary arch was similar independent of stitching or unstitching the palate. Position of the implant had a significant effect on trueness.