Development and evaluation of a new 3-D digitization and computer graphic system to study the anatomic tissue and restoration surfaces.

It is necessary to visualize and reconstruct tissue anatomic surfaces accurately for a variety of oral rehabilitation applications such as surface wear characterization and automated fabrication of dental restorations, accuracy of reproduction of impression and die materials, etc. In this investigation, a 3-D digitization and computer-graphic system was developed for surface characterization. The hardware consists of a profiler assembly for digitization in an MTS biomechanical test system with an artificial mouth, an IBM PS/2 computer model 70 for data processing and a Hewlett-Packard laser printer for hardcopy outputs. The software used includes a commercially available Surfer 3-D graphics package, a public domain data-fitting alignment software and an inhouse Pascal program for intercommunication plus some other limited tasks. Surfaces were digitized before and after rotation by angular displacement, the digital data were interpolated by Surfer to provide a data grid and the surfaces were computer graphically reconstructed: Misaligned surfaces were aligned by the data-fitting alignment software under different choices of parameters. The effect of different interpolation parameters (e.g. grid size, method of interpolation) and extent of rotation on the alignment accuracy was determined. The results indicate that improved alignment accuracy results from optimization of interpolation parameters and minimization of the initial misorientation between the digitized surfaces. The method provides important advantages for surface reconstruction and visualization, such as overlay of sequentially generated surfaces and accurate alignment of pairs of surfaces with small misalignment.

[1]  W. Douglas,et al.  Measurement of sealant volume in vivo using image-processing technology. , 1988, Quintessence international.

[2]  W. Douglas,et al.  Measurement of change in surface contour by computer graphics. , 1985, Dental materials : official publication of the Academy of Dental Materials.

[3]  F Duret,et al.  CAD-CAM in dentistry. , 1988, Journal of the American Dental Association.

[4]  Ian Briggs Machine contouring using minimum curvature , 1974 .

[5]  B R Lang,et al.  Determination of the accuracy of three die systems. , 1991, The Journal of prosthetic dentistry.

[6]  W. Douglas,et al.  The wear of dental amalgam in an artificial mouth: a clinical correlation. , 1985, Dental materials : official publication of the Academy of Dental Materials.

[7]  R DeLong,et al.  Development of an Artificial Oral Environment for the Testing of Dental Restoratives: Bi-axial Force and Movement Control , 1983, Journal of dental research.

[8]  B R Lang,et al.  In vivo wear. Part I: The Michigan computer-graphic measuring system. , 1988, The Journal of prosthetic dentistry.

[9]  W. Douglas,et al.  The wear of a posterior composite in an artificial mouth: a clinical correlation. , 1986, Dental materials : official publication of the Academy of Dental Materials.

[10]  D Rekow,et al.  Computer-aided design and manufacturing in dentistry: a review of the state of the art. , 1987, The Journal of prosthetic dentistry.