2015
DOI: 10.1259/dmfr.20140225
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Guidelines for clinical use of CBCT: a review

Abstract: Objectives: To identify guidelines on the clinical use of CBCT in dental and maxillofacial radiology, in particular selection criteria, to consider how they were produced, to appraise their quality objectively and to compare their recommendations. Methods: A literature search using MEDLINE (Ovid ® ) was undertaken prospectively from 1 January 2000 to identify published material classifiable as "guidelines" pertaining to the use of CBCT in dentistry. This was supplemented by searches on websites, an internet se… Show more

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Cited by 100 publications
(85 citation statements)
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“…1 Dental CBCT is still a relatively new imaging technology, but the volume of research related to this imaging technology has grown steadily over the past decade. 2,3 Guideline documents, recently reviewed by Horner et al(2015), 4 have been devised at local, national and supranational levels to assist dentists, radiologists, radiographers/technologists and medical physicists in safe use of CBCT; some of these give general guidance on optimization, although detail is absent. For example, the European guidelines 5 state, "X-ray tube voltage and tube current-exposure time product should be adjustable on CBCT equipment and must be optimised during use according to the clinical purpose of the examination…"; however, there is no specific instruction on how optimization is to be achieved in practice.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Dental CBCT is still a relatively new imaging technology, but the volume of research related to this imaging technology has grown steadily over the past decade. 2,3 Guideline documents, recently reviewed by Horner et al(2015), 4 have been devised at local, national and supranational levels to assist dentists, radiologists, radiographers/technologists and medical physicists in safe use of CBCT; some of these give general guidance on optimization, although detail is absent. For example, the European guidelines 5 state, "X-ray tube voltage and tube current-exposure time product should be adjustable on CBCT equipment and must be optimised during use according to the clinical purpose of the examination…"; however, there is no specific instruction on how optimization is to be achieved in practice.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Horner et al [9] recently evaluated 26 guidelines on the use of cone-beam computerised tomography in dental and maxillofacial radiology using the AGREE II instrument. As in the present analysis, they obtained good scores for domain 1 (scope and purpose) and very poor scores for domain 5 (applicability) [9].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Horner et al [9] recently evaluated 26 guidelines on the use of cone-beam computerised tomography in dental and maxillofacial radiology using the AGREE II instrument. As in the present analysis, they obtained good scores for domain 1 (scope and purpose) and very poor scores for domain 5 (applicability) [9]. San Martin-Galindo et al [10] used the AGREE II tool to evaluate three guidelines on the use of pit and fissure sealants for dental clinicians; scores for domain 6 (editorial independence) were lowest.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The limitation of this method could be the need for a CBCT with a FOV containing the maxilla and external ear canals. Keeping with the ALARA principle (radiation exposure to the patient should be as low as reasonably achievable), it is not justifiable to apply this technique in simple prosthodontic or orthodontic cases . The indication of the present technique could be orthognathic surgeries, complex interdisciplinary (i.e., orthodontic, prosthetic, implant, and TMJ) cases that need a CBCT scan with a large FOV, or patients who already have the head 3D radiograph from previous diagnosis/treatment (Fig ) …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%