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Three‐dimensional photography for the evaluation of facial profiles in obstructive sleep apnoea
Author(s) -
Lin ShihWei,
Sutherland Kate,
Liao YuFang,
Cistulli Peter A.,
Chuang LiPang,
Chou YuTing,
Chang ChihHao,
Lee ChungShu,
Li LiFu,
Chen NingHung
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
respirology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.857
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1440-1843
pISSN - 1323-7799
DOI - 10.1111/resp.13261
Subject(s) - medicine , craniofacial , photogrammetry , skull , cephalometry , nuclear medicine , orthodontics , radiology , anatomy , geology , remote sensing , psychiatry
ABSTRACT Background and objective Craniofacial structure is an important determinant of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) syndrome risk. Three‐dimensional stereo‐photogrammetry (3dMD) is a novel technique which allows quantification of the craniofacial profile. This study compares the facial images of OSA patients captured by 3dMD to three‐dimensional computed tomography (3‐D CT) and two‐dimensional (2‐D) digital photogrammetry. Measurements were correlated with indices of OSA severity. Methods Thirty‐eight patients diagnosed with OSA were included, and digital photogrammetry, 3dMD and 3‐D CT were performed. Distances, areas, angles and volumes from the images captured by three methods were analysed. Results Almost all measurements captured by 3dMD showed strong agreement with 3‐D CT measurements. Results from 2‐D digital photogrammetry showed poor agreement with 3‐D CT. Mandibular width, neck perimeter size and maxillary volume measurements correlated well with the severity of OSA using all three imaging methods. Mandibular length, facial width, binocular width, neck width, cranial base triangle area, cranial base area 1 and middle cranial fossa volume correlated well with OSA severity using 3dMD and 3‐D CT, but not with 2‐D digital photogrammetry. Conclusion 3dMD provided accurate craniofacial measurements of OSA patients, which were highly concordant with those obtained by CT, while avoiding the radiation associated with CT.