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Visual and instrumental coverage error of two dental shade guides: an in vivo study

Objectives This study aims to evaluate in vivo the color agreement between natural teeth and dental shade guides by means of visual and instrumental coverage error ( CE ) index. Materials and methods The color of the middle third of 735 incisors was visually determined by two evaluators using the Vi...

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Published in:Clinical oral investigations 2022-09, Vol.26 (9), p.5961-5968
Main Authors: Ruiz-López, Javier, Perez, Maria M., Lucena, Cristina, Pulgar, Rosa, López-Toruño, Ana, Tejada-Casado, Maria, Ghinea, Razvan
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Objectives This study aims to evaluate in vivo the color agreement between natural teeth and dental shade guides by means of visual and instrumental coverage error ( CE ) index. Materials and methods The color of the middle third of 735 incisors was visually determined by two evaluators using the Vita Classical (VC) and Vita 3D Master (V3DM) shade guides. The color match between the natural tooth and the shade tab was rated as poor (P), good (G), or optimum (O) by each observer. CIE color coordinates of the target teeth and shade tabs of VC and V3DM were instrumentally measured using a clinical spectrophotometer. Visual ( CE V ) and instrumental ( CE I ) coverage error indexes were computed using CIELAB and CIEDE2000 metrics for both shade guides. For CE V calculation, only the concordant inter-observer determination on tooth shade rated as O–O or O–G was used. The results were evaluated using perceptibility (PT, Δ E ab ∗ = 1.2, Δ E 00 = 0.8) and acceptability (AT, Δ E ab ∗ = 2.7, Δ E 00 = 1.8) color thresholds for dentistry. Results VC and V3DM exhibited CE I (2.5, 3.2, and 3.2, 2.7 CIELAB units; 1.9, 2.3, and 2.8, 2.4 CIEDE2000 units, respectively, for O–O and O–G match) and CE V (4.7, 4.8, and 4.1, 4.6 CIELAB units; 3.3, 3.4, and 3.4, 3.6 CIEDE2000 units, respectively, for O–O and O–G match) values greater than 50:50% AT for both color difference formulas. CE I contributes more than 50% (53.2–82.4% range) to the CE V value. This contribution depends on the shade guide used and the quality of the visual rating. Conclusions The evaluated shade guides exhibited visual coverage errors above acceptability thresholds, largely due to the contribution of the instrumental coverage error to the visual coverage error. Clinical relevance It necessary to further improve commercially available dental shade guides to facilitate achievement of satisfactory esthetics results in clinical practice.
ISSN:1436-3771
1432-6981
1436-3771
DOI:10.1007/s00784-022-04556-0