DOI: 10.3390/dj14070392 ISSN: 2304-6767

AI-Driven Quantitative Dental Imaging: A Clinical Framework for Assessing Root Resorption Across Treatment Modalities

Atanaz Darvizeh, Saman Fouladi, José Antonio González Sánchez, Guillermo Doria Jaureguizar, Oriol Quevedo, Fernando de la Iglesia Beyme, Funda Goker, Massimo Del Fabbro

Background: Orthodontically induced external root resorption (ERR) may affect long-term tooth stability, requiring a reliable assessment of root length changes. This study developed an artificial intelligence (AI)-based framework for automatic segmentation and quantitative evaluation of root resorption, comparing fixed appliances and clear aligner therapy. Methods: A dataset of 100 anonymised orthopantomographic (OPG) radiographs (50 fixed appliance, 50 clear aligner) obtained before and after orthodontic treatment was analysed. A U-Net model was trained for automatic tooth segmentation and quantitative assessment of tooth length changes. Measurements were computed from both AI-predicted and Dentist-annotated masks using pixel-based Python analysis (Python version 3.6), and pre-post differences were compared between methods. Results: The segmentation model achieved high performance with Intersection over Union values up to 89% and Dice Similarity Coefficients up to 95%. Quantitative analysis demonstrated significant reductions in root length following orthodontic treatment in both modalities (p < 0.0001). In the fixed appliance group, AI-based measurements showed an average root length reduction of 8.95%, while human measurements indicated a reduction of 10.16%. In the clear aligner group, AI measurements demonstrated a reduction of 2.81%, compared with 4.98% in human measurements. Root resorption was significantly greater in the fixed appliance group than in the clear aligner group (p < 0.0001). AI-derived measurements showed strong agreement with expert evaluations. Conclusions: AI-based analysis of panoramic radiographs may provide a reliable and reproducible approach for quantifying orthodontically induced root resorption. The findings suggest that clear aligner therapy was associated with lower root length reduction; however, larger multi-centre studies and external validation are required before clinical implementation.

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