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CHALLENGES OF PHOTOGRAMMETRIC INTRA-ORAL TOOTH MEASUREMENT
H. L. Mitchell *• •, R.G. Chadwick b
3 Civil, Surveying & Environmental Engineering, University of Newcastle, Australia - harvey.mitchell@newcastle.edu.au
b Dental School, University of Dundee, United Kingdom - r.g.chadwick@dundee.ac.uk
KEY WORDS: Medicine, Dentistry, Automation, Application, Close range, Teeth
ABSTRACT:
Recording the surface shape of a living tooth would seem to be a straightforward photogrammetric task, but the researchers’
experiences in developing a procedure for routine intra-oral tooth measurement shows that, in practice, photogrammetric
measurement of the living tooth in the mouth has difficult challenges which are predominantly photographic. Although the problem
of access can be overcome by using specialist intra-oral dental cameras, arranging multiple images is problematic. A second
challenge arises because of the optical characteristics of dental enamel: the tooth surface is featureless and is unsuitable for
photogrammetric mapping without some augmentation, and the enamel is also highly reflective. Some imaging tests have been
carried out on teeth in the mouth in the search for an automated measurement technique, but, to avoid patient discomfort, further
investigations have been carried out on an extracted tooth, whose characteristics are similar to those of the live tooth. In an example
cited here, a pair of images of an extracted frontal incisor was collected with a single camera, a camera base of about 6 mm and a
base-to-height ratio of 1:2. To make the enamel surface both opaque and textured, it was painted with a weak water colour solution.
Features detected with an interest operator were matched by area-based matching, and coverage was of acceptable accuracy and
density except in areas of illumination glare. The measurement should be repeatable with living teeth by duplicating the conditions
of the photography, but procedures with living patients are noticeably more awkward than working with inert objects.
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 General
The ultimate goal of the work outlined here is to measure living
teeth within the human mouth using automated
photogrammetric methods. The work has begun with attempts
to measure extracted teeth, as this clearly avoids the need for
uncomfortable access to patients during continual
experimentation. Recording the surface shape of a tooth would
seem to be a straightforward photogrammetric task, but the
researchers have found that, in practice, photogrammetric
measurement of the living tooth in the mouth, and even the
extracted tooth, has a number of distinct and difficult
photographic challenges. This paper reports some of the
experiences and progress of the researchers in initial attempts at
developing a procedure for routine automated intra-oral tooth
measurement.
1.2 Dental studies and uses of surface measurement
Measurement of the shape of living human teeth has beneficial
applications in dental research, to enable researchers to quantify
the loss of tooth surface material. This loss can be brought
about by contact with acids produced by bacteria upon
metabolising sugars in foods (causing dental caries/decay) or by
direct contact with the tooth surface itself (dental erosion). It
may also arise from mechanical wear and tear such as seen in
abrasion or attrition. Considerable dental research effort is
expended investigating each of these matters. The
investigations into all of these issues frequently involves
measuring teeth shapes at various epochs, in order to carry out
comparisons which indicate the volume and distribution of
decayed, eroded or abraded material. The studies can be
expected to involve the measurement of statistically significant
numbers of teeth. Hence, it is arguable that dental research into
tooth surface loss represents a realistic area of demand for
measurement, and it is foreseeable that it could be undertaken
photogrammetrically.
In addition, measurement of the shape of living teeth has
applications for clinicians, primarily for the fabrication of
crowns, as is borne out by the existence of commercial optical
(but not photogrammetric) measuring systems (e.g., Sirona
GmbH, 2008; D4D Technologies, 2008). The use of shape
measurement for recording patients’ dental histories is also
imaginable, although this is not seen to be occurring at the
moment.
It is assumed by the writers of this paper that the convenience
requirements of a commercial measurement system for clinical
use would be much more stringent than for research use, so it is
the research use, including the writers’ own dental research use,
(e.g., Chadwick et al., 2005) to which these studies are
currently targetted.
1.3 Current methods
Despite the extensive need for tooth measurement, direct intra
oral measurement can currently be prohibitively expensive.
Consequently, measurement of the three-dimensional shape of
teeth (whether for research or clinical use) normally proceeds
by taking castings of the teeth and, most often, by the formation
of replicas from the castings. The replicas are then measured,
often by mechanical methods, using styli, or just occasionally
by optical/imaging methods, including photogrammetry
(Grenness et al., 2008). To obtain statistically meaningful
quantities of patient tooth measurements in an extensive
investigation of dental erosion between 2001 and 2003, the
Corresponding author.