Ekaterina Rakhmatullina, Xiaojie Wang, Barbara Beyeler, Adrian Lussi, Anke Bossen, Christoph Hoschele, Christoph Meier
Journal of Biomedical Optics, Vol. 16, Issue 10, 107002, (October 2011) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3631791
TOPICS: Reflection, Specular reflections, Teeth, Calcium, In vitro testing, Tissues, Scanning electron microscopy, Surface roughness, Biological research, Statistical analysis
We present assembly and application of an optical reflectometer for the analysis of dental erosion. The erosive procedure involved acid-induced softening and initial substance loss phases, which are considered to be difficult for visual diagnosis in a clinic. Change of the specular reflection signal showed the highest sensitivity for the detection of the early softening phase of erosion among tested methods. The exponential decrease of the specular reflection intensity with erosive duration was compared to the increase of enamel roughness. Surface roughness was measured by optical analysis, and the observed tendency was correlated with scanning electron microscopy images of eroded enamel. A high correlation between specular reflection intensity and measurement of enamel softening (r2 ≥ −0.86) as well as calcium release (r2 ≥ −0.86) was found during erosion progression. Measurement of diffuse reflection revealed higher tooth-to-tooth deviation in contrast to the analysis of specular reflection intensity and lower correlation with other applied methods (r2 = 0.42-0.48). The proposed optical method allows simple and fast surface analysis and could be used for further optimization and construction of the first noncontact and cost-effective diagnostic tool for early erosion assessment in vivo.