Panoramic screening for dental anomalies assessed by professionals with identical and different backgrounds.

The aim of the present study was to evaluate how dental professionals with identical and different backgrounds assess dental anomalies viewed on panoramic radiographs. 101 panoramic radiographs performed of 9-to-10-yr-old children were examined independently by three orthodontists and two radiologists. All observers agreed on the recording of number and identification of congenitally missing permanent teeth. The observers' assessments of malpositioned teeth, teeth in infraocclusion, and primary teeth with atypical/non root resorption varied, however, to a great extent. Two of the orthodontists seemed to report only major deviations from normality (in 38 and 51 of the children respectively) while one reported several more findings (in 85 children). The radiologists reported abnormal findings in 80 and 88 children respectively. In only three children were no dental anomalies reported by any observer. The inconsistent reporting of the majority of dental anomalies (except for agenesis) in children, even among members of subgroups with a similar educational background (e.g. orthodontists), substantiates the need for an evaluation of the expedience of panoramic screening.

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