Chronological versus dental age in subjects from 5 to 19 years: a comparative study with forensic implications
Claudia Corral1, Felipe García1, Jorge García1, Pilar León1, Adriana Herrera, OD2, Carlos Martínez, OD3,
Freddy Moreno, OD4
1. Dentistry students, School of Dentistry, Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia.
e-mail: clauco18@hotmail.com felipe44_4@hotmail.com kuiki911@hotmail.com pilejava24@hotmail.com
2. Professor, School of Dentistry, Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia. e-mail: adrianaherrera65@hotmail.com
3. Professor, School of
Dentistry, Universidad del Valle, Researcher Oral and Maxillofacial
Surgery Group, Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia. e-mail: carlosbettin@hotmail.com
4. Professor, School of
Dentistry, Universidad del Valle. Researcher Oral and Maxillofacial
Surgery Group, Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia. e-mail: freddymg@univalle.edu.co
Received for publication March 5, 2009 Accepted for publication February 9, 2010
SUMMARY
Objectives:
This study evaluated six methods used in estimating the age of patients
attending the Dental School at Universidad del Valle, evaluating dental
development by using panoramic radiographs. Additionally, the study
determined the sexual identity of the person and the bilateral symmetry
of development, the maturity and the chronological eruption of
permanent teeth.
Materials and methods: This
is a descriptive, quantitative and transversal study that evaluated
which of the six methods (Logan & Kronfeld; Schour & Massler;
Moorrees, Fanning & Hunt; Demirjian, Goldstein & Tanner;
Ubelaker & Smith) for estimating the age of a patient through
radiographic evaluation of dental development is the most correlated
with the chronological age of the patient, so it can be used for
forensic purposes.
Results: The
Moorrees, Fanning & Hunt and the Smith methods showed high
correlation (0.7874 and 0.7808, respectively). The Logan & Kronfeld
methods presented low correlation (0.6879). The sample studied did not
show sexual dimorphism or bilateral asymmetry.
Conclusions: All
methods evaluated have a high correlation coefficient between the
dental age and the radiographic age. However, the Moorrees, Fanning
& Hunt, and Smith methods presented higher correlation coefficients
between dental and chronological age.
Keywords: Forensic sciences; Forensic dentistry; Dental age.
Edad cronológica vs. edad dental en individuos de 5 a 19 años:
un estudio comparativo con implicaciones forenses
RESUMEN
Objetivos:
Se evaluaron seis métodos para calcular la edad a partir del
desarrollo dental mediante radiografías panorámicas en
pacientes de la Escuela de Odontología de la Universidad del
Valle respecto a la edad cronológica. Se determinaron
también el dimorfismo sexual y la simetría bilateral del
desarrollo, maduración y erupción de los dientes
permanentes.
Materiales y métodos: Estudio
descriptivo transversal cuantitativo que evaluó la concordancia
entre seis métodos para estimar la edad a partir del desarrollo
dental (Logan y Kronfeld; Schour y Massler; Moorrees, Fanning y Hunt;
Demirjian, Goldstein y Tanner; Ubelaker y Smith) y la edad
cronológica a partir de las radiografías
panorámicas, con fines forenses.
Resultados: Los
métodos de Moorrees, Fanning y Hunt y de Smith presentan una
mayor correlación (0.7874 y 0.7808 respectivamente). Asimismo,
el método de Logan y Kronfeld es el que presenta la
correlación menor (0.6879). La muestra estudiada no
presentó ni dimorfismo sexual ni asimetría bilateral.
Conclusiones: Todos
los métodos tenidos en cuenta en este estudio resultan adecuados
para calcular la edad de un individuo, sin embargo los métodos
de Moorrees, Fanning y Hunt y de Smith presentaron los mayores
coeficientes de correlación entre la edad dental y la edad
cronológica.
Palabras clave: Ciencias forenses; Odontología forense; Edad dental.
Identifying humans has
become a fundamental backbone of civilization because societies demand
the establishment of the identity of individuals, alive or after their
death, with the objective of alleviating the sorrow of their close ones
with social, legal, political, and economic purposes. During the
identification process of an individual’s remains, cadaver, or a
live person, we must fill out what is known within the anthropological
and forensic context as the basic identification quatrain (which
includes obtaining an age estimation, as well as the determination of
gender, ethnicity, and height), which will allow knowing the identity
of an individual through the analysis of osseous structures and dental
characteristics1.
The estimation of an
individual’s age consists of the study of osseous and dental
characteristics to have a close approximation of a human being’s
chronological age. The analysis of these processes is based on the
determination and quantification of the events occurring during the
growth and development processes, given that they generally present a
constant sequence, as a result of a genetic-environmental interrelation
that determines that in the general population some individuals will
have different maturity rhythms1.
In specialized literature,
there are different methods studying the development, maturity and
tooth eruption for the purpose of estimating biological age from the
teeth and managing an approximation to the chronological age; bearing
in mind that the tendencies in the proportions of dental maturation
vary with respect to the ethnic group studied and that these even vary
among members of a same ethnic group, depending on the geographic
distribution and environment. These methods are supported based on the
evidence presented by the fact that the development and formation of
the teeth is produced slowly and constantly along a period of time
between the fetal stage until reaching 20 years of age and on the
degenerative changes of the dental tissue occurring from that moment,
in such a manner that we could eventually estimate age from an interval
of the biological age to approximate the chronological age2.
In Colombia few studies have
been conducted in this field. In 2001, Arévalo and Infante3
compared four radiographic methods to determine dental age from
permanent teeth in a sample of mestizos from Bogotá, concluding
that the methods by Smith and Moorrees reached a greater degree of
correspondence between age of dental maturation and chronological age;
Hernández and Sierra4 analyzed different dental and osseous
structures that could determine biological age and characterize three
legally important chronological age groups; thereby, developing a
suitable and applicable model for the Colombian population and which is
currently employed by the National Institute for Legal Medicine and
Forensic Sciences in Bogotá (Instituto Nacional de Medicina
Legal y Ciencias Forenses, Seccional Bogotá). Likewise, this
study determined that dental maturation was more effective than osseous
maturation through the carpogram when estimating biological age.
Thus, through this analysis
of dental development we can obtain valuable information from deceased
humans in a way which facilitates identifying an individual and
provides preliminary forensic proof that can guide judicial
proceedings. For living individuals, the opinion of age within the of
forensic sciences, especially forensic dentistry, plays an important
judicial role due to the classification of a crime that may have been
committed by a juvenile who is less than 14 years of age or who is
between 14 and 18 years of age, which will determine how they will be
penalized, the place of reclusion, and restoration of rights: under
legal age per the Code for Children and Adolescents (Legislation 906 of
2004) and of legal age per the Penal Code (Legislation 1098 of 2006).
Similarly, in cases of victimizers, these will be aggravated if the
victims are less than 14 years of age.
However, there are
difficulties when estimating the biological age of an individual with
forensic purposes, for this reason macroscopic methods have been
devised for chronological age approximation based on osseous
development (observation of the shape and state of metamorphosis of the
ossification centers, epiphyseal closure, and length of some bones),
growth and development of hair on the body and external sexual organs,
and development stages, along with dental erruption2,5. Hence, in view
of the great quantity of methods available in specialized literature
around the world and the scant research in Colombian populations, this
study seeks to evaluate which method is best suited in estimating age
from dental development through panoramic radiographs in patients
attending the School of Dentistry at Universidad del Valle.
Age estimation. The concept
of biological or physiological age is based on the degree of an
individual’s morphological and functional differentiation through
one or more tissue systems, whenever said differences are given by the
sequence of multiple irreversible events, which are observed via
clinical exploration and radiographic analysis6. Legal and forensic
circles talk about: chronological age or real age when bearing in mind
the passage of time in years, months, and days without counting the
intrauterine period; of documental age obtained from documents like the
certificate of live birth, the birth certificate, the citizen’s
identification, and the passport among others4,5; and, finally, of the
dental age, which is determined based on the development stages of
temporary and permanent dentitions and the physiological degenerative
phenomena occurring throughout the individual’s lifetime like
wear through attrition, obliteration of the pulp chamber, and dentinal
sclerosis among others1,7,8.
Methods for age estimation.
The methods mostly used and applied within forensic sciences to
estímate age in human remains are those involved in macroscopic
and radiographic manner of the description of the state of maturation
or development of the bones and/or teeth. Nevertheless, the teeth
constitute a very reliable source in age estimation because the enamel
is the hardest tissue in the human organism and has a high capacity for
taphonomic preservation even under extreme conditions of pH, humidity,
salinity, and high temperatures1,9,10; in addition to the nature of the
dentine, which is isolated from the environment and is very stable and
grants the teeth the capacity to present low susceptibility to big
changes related to external stimuli, in such a way that the formation
and resorption processes of the dentine are very low in relation to the
bone1. Similarly, for age estimation based on maturation, the teeth are
more convenient structures given that they are less affected by
endocrine disease, dietary deficiency states, and environmental aspects
affecting their development, providing their total mineralization and
erruption occurr within the oral cavity3,11,12.
Dental development and
maturation. The process of dental maturation is correlated to different
mineralization morphological stages that can be radiographically
observed and whose process follows a much more uniform, progressive,
sequenced, and continuous than the eruption, and less influenced upon
by external factors. For these reasons, diverse age estimation methods
have been developed based on the mineralization stage of tooth germs.
All the age evaluation methods based on dental maturation follow the
same systematic approach in which estimating age merely implies having
oral radiographies, which can be used in live subjects, cadavers, and
skeletal remains1.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Type of study. This is a
quantitative transversal descriptive study, which seeks to evaluate six
methods to estimate chronological age from dental development through
panoramic radiographs in patients attending the School of Dentistry at
Universidad del Valle. Additionally, this work will determine the
sexual dimorphism and bilateral symmetry of dental development and
maturation.
Population and sample. To
make up the sample, we reviewed the inactive file clinical charts from
the School of Dentistry at Universidad del Valle and kept in mind 196
panoramic radiographs conveniently selected from Colombian individuals
from both genders (109 women and 87 men), between 5 and 19 years of age
without dental syndromes and malformations affecting development,
maturation, and number of teeth. Likewise, the clinical histories
needed to have the date of birth of the individual and the date the
radiographs were taken to arrive at the patient’s chronological
age. It should be mentioned that the chronological age was converted to
decimal age to permit correlating it to age estimated by the different
methods.
Standarization of the study.
Observers received training by an expert in oral and maxillofacial
radiology diagnosis, who taught the systematic method of observation of
a panoramic radiograph and the radiographic methods reported most in
specialized literature (Logan and Kronfeld; Schour and Massler;
Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt; Demirjian, Goldstein and Tanner; Ubelaker
and Smith) to estimate age from the development of the teeth.
Observation. Once the
research is endorsed by the Human Ethics Committee of the Faculty of
Health at Universidad del Valle and according to ethical principles for
medical research on human beings indicated by the World Medical
Association in the Helsinki Declaration; we proceeded to conduct the
observation, analysis, and tabulation of the 196 panoramic radiographs
through the six methods kept in mind in this study with the aid of a
viewbox and a 10X clamp magnifier. The X-ray signs were kept hidden to
keep the observers from knowing the chronological age of the individual
and, thus, reduce bias.
Statistical analysis. Upon
registering the observation results on an Excel® spreadsheet, we
proceeded to determine the degree of correlation among the age of
dental maturation and chronological age with each of the methods,
sexual dimorphism, and bilateral asymmetry through the Stata software
version 10 via the Spearman nonparametric correlation test.
Additionally, Bland-Altman plots were drawn to evidence agreement
between age estimation via any of the methods and chronological age via
MedCalc. The variables kept in mind were radiographic chronological
age, dental age, gender, bilateral asymmetry, age estimation methods
used, and dental maturation stages.
RESULTS
The Moorrees, Fanning and
Hunt, and Smith methods represent greater correlation with respect to
chronological age. The Logan and Kronfeld method presented the lowest
correlation (Table 1).
The agreement of the six
methods was plotted (Bland and Altman agreement plot) to show the
average ratios between chronological age and estimated age by using
each method, i.e., if the chronological age is greater than that
estimated by the method (the ratio is greater than 1), then the
calculated dental age was underestimated; conversely, if the
chronological age is lower than that estimated by the method (the ratio
was less than 1), indicating the calculated dental age was
overestimated. On the graphics, the X axis shows the average ages and
the Y axis shows the
ratio between the chronological age and the dental age estimated by
each method.
The blue line corresponds to
the average of the ratios; the red dotted line represents the null
value (based on this line the agreement of the method is determined, if
this line agrees with the agrees with the blue line it indicates
absolute agreement), the blue solid line indicates the average of
ratios of radiographic age over the age estimated by each method, and
the dotted burgundy lines mark off the standard deviations indicating
the best agreement.
Based on this, the methods
by Logan and Kronfel, Schour and Masler, Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt,
Ubelaker, and Smith tended to overestimate age with respect to
radiographic age (Graphics 1, 2, 3, 5, 6), while the method by
Dermijian, Goldstein and Tanner underestimated age (Graphic 4).
With respect to sexual
dimorphism, none of the six methods showed differences in the
correlation of estimated age and radiographic age between men and
women. Nevertheless, there is a tendency among men for revealing higher
correlation coefficients. Likewise, the Logan and Kronfeld method
presented the lowest correlation levels in both sexes.
Regarding bilateralism, big
differences were not observed in dental development between the right
and left sides, which present a strong correlation with respect to
radiographic age and among such (Table 2).
DISCUSSION
Logan & Kronfeld (1933).
In 1933, these authors discovered calcification age, complete formation
age, eruption age, and exfoliation age of each of the teeth from 25
dissected post-mortem specimens with ages between zero months to 15
years. The margin of error was estimated as ±1.5 years without
regard to gender. The Logan and Kronfeld method is a graphic
comparative method of the dental eruption and development process. It
was the first study of this type reported used for clinical dentistry
purposes. In this study, the Logan and Kronfeld method presented the
lowest correlation coefficient between dental age and chronological
age, with a tendency to overestimating the chronological age13.
Schour & Massler (1941).
This method, based on the Logan and Kronfeld method, consists of
comparing the development stage of the teeth through a panoramic
radiograph with a map of images representing the temporary and
permanent dentition development phases. The limitation of this method
lies in the sample size, which does not estimate sexual dimorphism and
that the age ratio was estimated as ±6 months, which is a very
tight range. This is a comparative graphic method, which graphically
represents in Atlas manner 21 different chronological stages of dental
maturation and eruption14. In 2005, H. M. Liversidge conducted a
comparison of five methods (Schour and Massler, Gustafson and Koch,
Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt, Smith, and Deutsch, Tam and Stack) to
estimate ages in 63 individuals between 0 and 5.4 years, concluding
that the graphic method by Schour and Massler was considerably more
exact than the methods based on the mineralization of the stages of
teeth formation, in addition to being easily applied and interpreted15.
In this study, the correlation coefficient for the Schour and Massler
method was high and overestimated the chronological age.
Moorrees, Fanning & Hunt
(1963). For estimating dental age, mandibular teeth are generally used
because the overlapping of osseous structures hinders analysis of
maxillary teeth. The values of ages corresponding to the formation
stages are averaged obtaining the dental age through the mean. This is
a graphic (14 stages of dental development evidencing three great
stages of dental development: crown formation, reticular formation, and
apical closure) and quantitative numerical method that performs very
well in individuals from 4.7 to 20.7 years of age16. This method, whose
results applied to Canadian populations yield a standard deviation of
±0.56 years for only one tooth and ±0.09 years when five
or more teeth are averaged, indicating that the age of a young person
can be estimated with a margin of error close to two months2. In this
study, the method by Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt presented the highest
correlation coefficient between dental age and radiographic age (Table 1) with a tendency to overestimating the radiographic age (Graphic 3).
Demirjian, Goldstein &
Tanner (1973). This is currently the most used method for chronological
age estimation stemming from dental maturation. In 1976, Demirjian,
Goldstein and Tanner evaluated radiographically the degree of
mineralization of the seven teeth of the mandibular left quadrant. The
method establishes eight stages of maturation for each tooth sequenced
with capital letters from A to H, where each stage becomes a numerical
value, which when added gives us an amount corresponding to the degree
of maturity for the particular subject (this alphabetical description
of the stages of dental maturation are converted into constant
numerical values to be correlated by gender). Generally, only the left
mandibular side is evaluated (no differences were found between both
sides) because observation of the maxillary teeth is more difficult due
to overlapping of osseous structures, especially during the (first) six
years of life16. The method was designed to be used within the clinical
dentistry context for the purpose of determining the degree of dental
development and within the forensic context to estimate chronological
age from the degree of dental maturation8.
However, Smith16 manifested
that it is ideal for determining the stage of dental maturation in
individuals with known chronological age, but not as a method for
predicting chronological age. In fact, Maber et al.12 found that this
method was the most precise in estimating age for forensic purposes,
even when the individual’s gender was unknown, in addition to
being an easily applied numerical and comparative method, given the
representation it makes of each one of the development stages of the
teeth.
Demirjian and Levesque18,
studied dental development through 5,437 panoramic radiographs (2,705
girls and 2,732 boys) in a French-Canadian population ranging between
2.5 and 19 years of age. The authors reportedly found differences
between men and women in the highest age ranges, in which the women had
a more advanced dental development than the men. In the lower ranges,
sexual dimorphism was not observed. Reventlid et al.19, applied
the method by Demirjian, Goldstein and Tanner along with other methods
in 197 radiographs of children 5, 6, 9, and 12 years of age, concluding
that any method is acceptable when approximating the chronological age
with respect to the dental age. Similarly, Rai and Anand20 found high
precision with this method when used with small children. For Latin
America, Loevy22 found that dental development of African American and
Latin American children is more advanced with respect to the
chronological age proposed in the method by Demirjian, Goldstein and
Tanner. Likewise, this author manifests that said method is very
reliable and results ideal in estimating dental age because it is based
on the development of tooth germs, which is not affected by
environmental factors.
Already in Colombia,
Arévalo and Infante3 conducted a study with a sample of 61
panoramic radiographs belonging to a sampling of Colombians classified
into three age groups: 8 to 9 years, 10 to 11 years, and 12 to 13
years, which compared four dental age estimation methods (Nolla,
Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt, Demirjian, Goldstein and Tanner, and Smith)
in which the method by Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt and the method by
Smith were the most exact.
This variability in the
results of the different reports is explained by PDavis and Hagg22, who
concluded that the method by Demirjian, Goldstein and Tanner is not
applicable to all populations because of the ethnic differences.
In this study, the
Demirjian, Goldstein and Tanner method presented a high correlation
coefficient between dental age and radiographic age (Table 1);
nevertheless, the method tended to underestimate (Graphic 4).
Ubelaker (1989). In 1989,
Ubelaker developed a graphic method that represents formation stages of
the crowns and roots of temporary and permanent teeth and the eruption
sequence of a group of Native Americans. Rodríguez1 indicates
that this method is specific for Amerindian populations.
González-Colmenares
et al. 23, carried out a study comparing two methods, including the one
by Ubelaker, for estimating age in a population of 79 Colombian
Caucasoid Mestizos, in which they conclude that it is necessary to
create specific formulas to estimate age in each human group.
Smith24 made a comparison of
the degree of precision between the graphic comparative methods by
Schour and Massler and by Ubelaker in 419 Caucasian American children
between 5 and 15 years of age, concluding that both methods have low
correlation levels between dental age and chronological age with a
tendency for overestimation. In this study, as in the other methods
examined, the Ubelaker method presented a high correlation coefficient
with a tendency for overestimating the chronological age (Table 1, Graphic 5).
Smith (1991). In 1991, Smith
modified the method by Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt, describing each
tooth individually and averaging all the ages, in such a manner that
the median corresponded to the dental age. Note that in this method,
the apical closure does not have a value assigned as a marker of dental
age. What is interesting about this method is that it was focused
specifically as an age prediction tool7. This numerical method has
elevated and very significant approximation values; it is also easy to
use, given that its main objective is age prediction4.
In 2002, Hernández
and Sierra4 suggested that the Smith method is best suited for age
estimation for Colombian individuals. In this study, the Smith method
presented a rather high correlation coefficient (Table 1), quite
similar to the method by Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt.
CONCLUSIONS
According to the correlation
coefficients obtained in this study, all the methods may be used for
estimating chronological age based on dental development. However, the
method by Moorrees, Fanning and Hunt and the method by Smith (numerical
methods) presented the greatest correlation between dental age and
chronological age; while, the method by Logan and Kronfeld (comparative
method) presented the lowest correlation.
If the correlation
coefficient is expressed in terms of overestimation or underestimation
of chronological age from the dental age, no significant discrepancy is
observed, given that the different methods have standard deviations
that increase as the individual’s age increases. In fact, it can
be seen in literature that the methods work best with temporary
dentition and with early and late mixed dentition than with permanent
dentition.
In the sample studied, the development of the teeth does not evidence sexual dimorphism.
With respect to
bilateralism, dental development on the right and left sides presents
high correlation between these with respect to chronological age.
Generally, the methods used in this study only employ one side to
observe dental development and eruption; however, we sought to observe
bilateralism to determine if the teeth in each hemifacial had the same
simultaneous development pattern, which was positively corroborated.
RECOMMENDATIONS
According to literature
reports, there is sufficient information evidencing that the methods
employed in estimating age from dental development vary in terms of
underestimation or overestimation of age among different human groups.
Hence, and given the ethnic diversity of the Colombian population,
studies should be conducted involving the groups that predominantly
make up the Colombian population (Andean Mestizos, Caribbean Mestizos,
Afro-Colombians, and Indigenous groups), to generate new knowledge
applicable to forensic sciences (age estimation within the basic
identification quatrain) and dental anthropology (biological
information of past populations based on dental development).
Likewise, it is important to
conduct studies correlating different methods for age estimation, like
physical methods (pubic and underarm hair and development of secondary
sexual characters) and osseous methods (clavicle, ribs, and carpogram),
to determine the versatility of the methods (cost, time, expertise), as
well as accuracy levels (concordance).
Given that age estimation
methods stemming from the eruption and development of the teeth
function best in children, it is very convenient to conduct a study
with a broad sample, which implies the analysis of the development and
eruption of the third molars for young adults.
Conflict of interest. None of the authors has conflicts of interest related to this study.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors thank the Vice
Rectory of Research at Universidad del Valle for funding this project
through the Internal Call for Projects for the Conformation of the
2008-2009 Research Projects Base.
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