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The investigators aim to investigate if the additional information available from a 3D scan of the wisdom tooth can reduce the risk of nerve injury during wisdom tooth surgery compared to conventional 2D images.
Wisdom tooth surgery is a common surgical procedures that a significant proportion of the population will undergo. As with any other surgical procedure, there are potential complications, of which, injury to the nerve supplying feeling to the lip, chin, and tongue is the most significant. This can lead to persistent pain, tingling, or numbness that may impact a patient's ability to eat and function.
The risk of nerve injury during wisdom tooth surgery is assessed using X-ray images, which show the position of the nerve and tooth in the jawbone. 2D and 3D scans are used, which have their own advantages and disadvantages such as reduced cost and radiation dose with 2D or more information from 3D images, but it remains unclear which is better at reducing the risk of nerve injuries.
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This pragmatic clinical trial is a multi-centre, two-arm, single-blind randomised controlled trial.
The primary research question is:
The secondary objectives are:
The study intervention:
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1,292 participants in 2 patient groups
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Anand Lalli, BDS PhD; Rahmeh Alhyari, BDS MFDS RCSEd
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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