The purpose of this study was to investigate the precision of a spectrophotometer in tooth shade determination compared with visual color matching using a shade guide in vitro. Moreover, the influence of different illuminants as well as of sex and professional experience of the examiners on visual color matching was analyzed.
Fifty examiners (13 men, 37 women; without dyschromatopsia), grouped by professional experience, determined the shades of 10 prosthetic teeth with the Vitapan classical shade guide under 4 illuminants (daylight, halogen, fluorescent [5000 K], fluorescent [nonspecific ceiling light]) and with a spectrophotometer (Shadepilot). Reproducibility (precision) of color determination was characterized by the average of the highest percentages of interexaminer agreement for each specimen. Additionally, color differences (ΔE) were calculated based on CIELab values.
The mean reproducibility of the spectrophotometer was 92.2%, while for visual examination it was 43.7%. The corresponding differences in CIELab color space amounted to ΔEinstr=2.6 and ΔEvis=5.2. Illuminants and professional experience showed a significant influence, while sex did not.
While the spectrophotometer provided higher reproducibility, considering the color differences, the results obtained by visual inspection were still satisfactory. The differences due to type of illuminant, degree of experience, and sex of the examiners are of little practical relevance.