A comparison between visual, intraoral scanner, and spectrophotometer shade matching: A clinical study

Visual shade matching is subjective and a cause of concern for clinicians. Different measurement devices have been developed to assist in tooth color selection and to achieve better esthetic results. However, consensus is lacking as to which method of tooth shade selection provides more predictable...

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Published inThe Journal of prosthetic dentistry Vol. 121; no. 2; pp. 271 - 275
Main Authors Liberato, Walleska Feijó, Barreto, Isadora Carvalho, Costa, Priscila Paganini, de Almeida, Cristina Costa, Pimentel, Welson, Tiossi, Rodrigo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.02.2019
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Summary:Visual shade matching is subjective and a cause of concern for clinicians. Different measurement devices have been developed to assist in tooth color selection and to achieve better esthetic results. However, consensus is lacking as to which method of tooth shade selection provides more predictable results. The purpose of this clinical study was to compare the reliability of different visual and instrumental methods for dental shade matching. Visual shade matching was performed by 3 experienced clinicians using 2 different shade guides (VITA Classical A1-D4 and VITA Toothguide 3D-MASTER with 29 tabs; VITA Zahnfabrik) with and without the aid of a light-correcting device (Smile Lite; Smile Line). An intraoral scanner (TRIOS; 3Shape A/S) and a spectrophotometer (VITA Easyshade Advance 4.0; VITA Zahnfabrik) were also used for color shade matching. The instrumental methods were repeated 3 times to determine repeatability. Shade-matching sessions for each method were performed under controlled lighting on the middle third of the maxillary right central incisor of 28 participants. The Fleiss' kappa statistical test was used to assess the reliability of each method. The weighted kappa statistical test was used to assess the agreement between the shades matched by different methods (α=.05). Instrumental methods were more accurate than visual methods. The best performance was found for the intraoral scanner configured for the 3D-MASTER scale (Fleiss' kappa value of .874) and for the spectrophotometer configured for the VITA Classical scale (Fleiss' kappa value of .805). The best visual shade-matching method was the VITA Classical scale associated with the light-correcting device (Fleiss' kappa value of .322). The Classical scale without the light-correcting device showed the poorest reliability (Fleiss' kappa value of .177) (P<.05). Instrumental methods for color shade matching were more reliable than the visual methods tested.
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ISSN:0022-3913
1097-6841
DOI:10.1016/j.prosdent.2018.05.004