Frontiers in Three-Dimensional Surface Imaging Systems for 3D Face Acquisition in Craniofacial Research and Practice: An Updated Literature Review

SOFT-TISSUE ANALYSIS Medicine (General) ACCURACY Review three-dimensional surface imaging VALIDATION face acquisition systems surface scanning 03 medical and health sciences Medicine, General & Internal R5-920 0302 clinical medicine 3D facial scanning General & Internal Medicine REPRODUCIBILITY VIRTUAL PATIENT FACIAL MORPHOLOGY face scanning 3D face acquisition Science & Technology PRECISION RELIABILITY STEREOPHOTOGRAMMETRY Life Sciences & Biomedicine SCANNING SYSTEM
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics14040423 Publication Date: 2024-02-14T16:18:46Z
ABSTRACT
Digitalizing all aspects of dental care is a contemporary approach to ensuring the best possible clinical outcomes. Ongoing advancements in 3D face acquisition have been driven by continuous research on craniofacial structures and treatment effects. An array of 3D surface-imaging systems are currently available for generating photorealistic 3D facial images. However, choosing a purpose-specific system is challenging for clinicians due to variations in accuracy, reliability, resolution, and portability. Therefore, this review aims to provide clinicians and researchers with an overview of currently used or potential 3D surface imaging technologies and systems for 3D face acquisition in craniofacial research and daily practice. Through a comprehensive literature search, 71 articles meeting the inclusion criteria were included in the qualitative analysis, investigating the hardware, software, and operational aspects of these systems. The review offers updated information on 3D surface imaging technologies and systems to guide clinicians in selecting an optimal 3D face acquisition system. While some of these systems have already been implemented in clinical settings, others hold promise. Furthermore, driven by technological advances, novel devices will become cost-effective and portable, and will also enable accurate quantitative assessments, rapid treatment simulations, and improved outcomes.
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