Case Study: Limitations of Panoramic Radiography in the Anterior Mandible

From Volume 36, Issue 10, December 2009 | Pages 620-623

Authors

Cameron Walker

BDS, MFDS RCSEd, SHO

Dundee Dental Hospital, Park Place, Dundee, UK

Articles by Cameron Walker

Donald Thomson

BDS, FDS RCSEd, DDR RCR

Consultant in Dental and Maxillofacial Radiology, Dundee Dental Hospital, Park Place, Dundee, UK

Articles by Donald Thomson

Gerald McKenna

BDS, MFDS FDS(Rest Dent), RCSEd, PgDipTLHE, PhD, FHEA

Dundee Dental Hospital, Park Place, Dundee, UK

Articles by Gerald McKenna

Abstract

Dental Panoramic Tomography (DPT) is a widely used and valuable examination in dentistry. One area prone to artefacts and therefore misinterpretation is the anterior region of the mandible. This case study discusses a periapical radiolucency related to lower anterior teeth that is discovered to be a radiographic artefact. Possible causes of the artefact include a pronounced depression in the mental region of the mandible or superimposition of intervertebral spaces. Additional limitations of the DPT image include superimposition of radio-opaque structures, reduced image detail compared to intra-oral views and uneven magnification. These problems often make the DPT inappropriate for imaging the anterior mandible.

Article

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