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Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy

Conventional skeletal age-at-death estimation methods employed for South African adults are deficient, facing several limitations. Dental ageing techniques remain under-researched for the population. In this study, I aimed to evaluate the applicability of the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) ageing metho...

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Main Author: Kotze, Daniël
Other Authors: Gibbon, Victoria
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Human Biology 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kotze, Daniël
author2 Gibbon, Victoria
author_browse Gibbon, Victoria
Kotze, Daniël
author_facet Gibbon, Victoria
Kotze, Daniël
author_sort Kotze, Daniël
collection Thesis
description Conventional skeletal age-at-death estimation methods employed for South African adults are deficient, facing several limitations. Dental ageing techniques remain under-researched for the population. In this study, I aimed to evaluate the applicability of the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) ageing method when applied to maxillary canines from a South African cadaveric sample. I explored the utility of under-researched methodological approaches for the method: mesiodistal radiographs, stereomicroscopic tooth section images and PARs excluding the enamel area. To maximise sample size, only maxillary canines were considered, which demonstrate several research advantages (e.g. relatively long functional survival and high accuracy rates). Following extraction, 52 adult teeth were radiographed, sectioned and analysed using stereomicroscopy. Labiolingual and mesiodistal radiographs and labiolingual stereomicroscopic tooth section images were captured and analysed using ImageJ to obtain PARs. Age estimation linear regression models were developed for ratios obtained from each image type, including and excluding the enamel area. Models were compared for performance and accuracy using best subsets regression and cross-validation analyses. The accuracy of international standards was also assessed using the study sample. The PAR method showed promising results. It demonstrated excellent observer reproducibility and sex-independence. Sample-specific models derived from tooth section images had the best performance and accuracy, obtaining cross-validation mean absolute errors (MAEs) and standard error of the estimates (SEEs) of approximately 7 - 8 years and 10 - 11 years, respectively. Labiolingual radiographic models (MAEs = 10 years; SEEs = 12 years) showed better performance and accuracy than mesiodistal radiographic models (MAEs = 12 years; SEEs = 16 2 years). Models excluding the enamel area performed better, producing slightly better cross validation error values. Standard PAR models performed relatively poorly and were inappropriate for the study sample. This research suggests that the PAR method is a suitable technique to complement and inform standard adult skeletal age analyses in South Africa. The labiolingual radiographic approach is most practical as it is relatively accurate, minimally invasive and efficient. This study contributes knowledge to the limited pool of data on dental ageing techniques for South African adults. It informs practitioners of ideal/optimal methodological approaches for the PAR method using maxillary canines.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40995
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:23.204Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Human Biology
publisherStr Department of Human Biology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40995 Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy Kotze, Daniël Gibbon, Victoria Mole, Calvin Medicine Conventional skeletal age-at-death estimation methods employed for South African adults are deficient, facing several limitations. Dental ageing techniques remain under-researched for the population. In this study, I aimed to evaluate the applicability of the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) ageing method when applied to maxillary canines from a South African cadaveric sample. I explored the utility of under-researched methodological approaches for the method: mesiodistal radiographs, stereomicroscopic tooth section images and PARs excluding the enamel area. To maximise sample size, only maxillary canines were considered, which demonstrate several research advantages (e.g. relatively long functional survival and high accuracy rates). Following extraction, 52 adult teeth were radiographed, sectioned and analysed using stereomicroscopy. Labiolingual and mesiodistal radiographs and labiolingual stereomicroscopic tooth section images were captured and analysed using ImageJ to obtain PARs. Age estimation linear regression models were developed for ratios obtained from each image type, including and excluding the enamel area. Models were compared for performance and accuracy using best subsets regression and cross-validation analyses. The accuracy of international standards was also assessed using the study sample. The PAR method showed promising results. It demonstrated excellent observer reproducibility and sex-independence. Sample-specific models derived from tooth section images had the best performance and accuracy, obtaining cross-validation mean absolute errors (MAEs) and standard error of the estimates (SEEs) of approximately 7 - 8 years and 10 - 11 years, respectively. Labiolingual radiographic models (MAEs = 10 years; SEEs = 12 years) showed better performance and accuracy than mesiodistal radiographic models (MAEs = 12 years; SEEs = 16 2 years). Models excluding the enamel area performed better, producing slightly better cross validation error values. Standard PAR models performed relatively poorly and were inappropriate for the study sample. This research suggests that the PAR method is a suitable technique to complement and inform standard adult skeletal age analyses in South Africa. The labiolingual radiographic approach is most practical as it is relatively accurate, minimally invasive and efficient. This study contributes knowledge to the limited pool of data on dental ageing techniques for South African adults. It informs practitioners of ideal/optimal methodological approaches for the PAR method using maxillary canines. 2025-02-20T14:16:00Z 2025-02-20T14:16:00Z 2024 2025-02-20T13:03:41Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40995 en eng application/pdf Department of Human Biology Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Medicine
Kotze, Daniël
Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy
title_full Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy
title_fullStr Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy
title_full_unstemmed Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy
title_short Adult age-at-death estimation using the pulp/tooth area ratio (PAR) method: a South African validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy
title_sort adult age at death estimation using the pulp tooth area ratio par method a south african validation study using periapical radiography and stereomicroscopy
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40995
work_keys_str_mv AT kotzedaniel adultageatdeathestimationusingthepulptootharearatioparmethodasouthafricanvalidationstudyusingperiapicalradiographyandstereomicroscopy