Sasano T, Nakajima I, Shoji N, Kuriwada S, Sanjo D, Ogino H, Miyahara T
Department of Oral Diagnosis, Tohoku University School of Dentistry, Sendai, Japan.
Endod Dent Traumatol. 1997 Apr;13(2):88-91. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-9657.1997.tb00016.x.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether use of transmitted laser light would enable a better assessment of human pulpal vitality than back-scattered light does (LDF: laser Doppler flowmetry). The experiments were carried out on ten upper central incisors in six subjects aged 23-28 years; five of the teeth were vital with no restoration, and five were non-vital. For use with transmitted laser light, the fibers within the probe of a conventional LDF apparatus were used, one for transmitting light onto the buccal surface, the other for receiving it at the palatal surface of the same tooth. For LDF, the probe was fixed at the buccal surface. Blood flow was measured at three different locations on each experimental tooth: the incisal third, the center and the cervical third of the tooth crown. In non-vital teeth, 1) output signals with transmitted laser light all registered zero, and no oscillation could be seen in recordings from any location on the tooth, but 2) LDF signals were above zero, there were regular oscillations related to heart rate, and passive increases in blood flow (corresponding to blood pressure increases) were recorded from both the center and the cervical third of the tooth, indicating that LDF registered blood flow of non-pulpal origin. In vital teeth, LDF signals were significantly higher than in non-vital teeth at each location on the tooth. At the central site on vital teeth, the output signals for transmitted laser light were about twice those seen with LDF, and passive blood flow changes corresponding to blood pressure increases were more clearly observed. These results indicated that transmitted laser light would be useful for the assessment of tooth pulp vitality both because the blood flow signals did not include flow of non-pulpal origin, and because its output signals and response to blood flow changes were clear and could easily be monitored.
本研究的目的是确定与背散射光相比,透射激光是否能更好地评估人体牙髓活力(LDF:激光多普勒血流仪)。实验在6名年龄在23至28岁的受试者的10颗上颌中切牙上进行;其中5颗牙齿健康且无修复体,另外5颗为无活力牙。对于透射激光的使用,采用了传统LDF设备探头内的光纤,一根用于将光投射到颊面,另一根用于在同一颗牙齿的腭面接收光。对于LDF,探头固定在颊面。在每颗实验牙齿的三个不同位置测量血流:牙冠的切端三分之一处、中央和颈三分之一处。在无活力牙中,1)透射激光的输出信号均记录为零,且在牙齿任何位置的记录中均未观察到振荡,但2)LDF信号高于零,存在与心率相关的规则振荡,并且在牙齿中央和颈三分之一处均记录到血流被动增加(对应于血压升高),表明LDF记录的是非牙髓源性血流。在健康牙齿中,LDF信号在牙齿的每个位置均显著高于无活力牙。在健康牙齿的中央部位,透射激光的输出信号约为LDF的两倍,并且更清楚地观察到对应于血压升高的被动血流变化。这些结果表明,透射激光可用于评估牙髓活力,这是因为血流信号不包括非牙髓源性血流,并且其输出信号和对血流变化的响应清晰且易于监测。