Background: Augmented-reality (AR) navigation is emerging as a means of turning pre-operative cone-beam CT data into intuitive, in situ guidance for difficult tooth removal, yet the scattered evidence has never been consolidated nor illustrated with a full clinical workflow. Aims: This study aims to narratively synthesise AR applications limited to dental extractions and to illustrate a full AR-guided clinical workflow. Methods: We performed a PRISMA-informed narrative search (PubMed + Cochrane, January 2015–June 2025) focused exclusively on AR applications in dental extractions and found nine eligible studies. Results: These pilot reports—covering impacted third molars, supernumerary incisors, canines, and cyst-associated teeth—all used marker-less registration on natural dental surfaces and achieved mean target-registration errors below 1 mm with headset set-up times under three minutes; the only translational series (six molars) recorded a mean surgical duration of 21 ± 6 min and a System Usability Scale score of 79. To translate these findings into practice, we describe a case of AR-guided mandibular third-molar extraction. A QR-referenced 3D-printed splint, intra-oral scan, and CBCT were fused to create a colour-coded hologram rendered on a Magic Leap 2 headset. The procedure took 19 min and required only a conservative osteotomy and accurate odontotomy that ended without neurosensory disturbance (VAS pain 2/10 at one week). Conclusions: Collectively, the literature synthesis and clinical demonstration suggest that current AR platforms deliver sub-millimetre accuracy, minimal workflow overhead, and high user acceptance in high-risk extractions while highlighting the need for larger, controlled trials to prove tangible patient benefit.

Pellegrino, G., Barausse, C., Tayeb, S., Vignudelli, E., Casaburi, M., Stradiotti, S., et al. (2025). Augmented Reality in Dental Extractions: Narrative Review and an AR-Guided Impacted Mandibular Third-Molar Case. APPLIED SCIENCES, 15(17), 1-16 [10.3390/app15179723].

Augmented Reality in Dental Extractions: Narrative Review and an AR-Guided Impacted Mandibular Third-Molar Case

Pellegrino, Gerardo
Primo
Conceptualization
;
Barausse, Carlo
Secondo
Supervision
;
Tayeb, Subhi
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
Vignudelli, Elisabetta
Writing – Review & Editing
;
Casaburi, Martina
Resources
;
Stradiotti, Stefano
Software
;
Ferretti, Fabrizio
Software
;
Cercenelli, Laura
Software
;
Marcelli, Emanuela
Penultimo
Conceptualization
;
Felice, Pietro
Ultimo
Validation
2025

Abstract

Background: Augmented-reality (AR) navigation is emerging as a means of turning pre-operative cone-beam CT data into intuitive, in situ guidance for difficult tooth removal, yet the scattered evidence has never been consolidated nor illustrated with a full clinical workflow. Aims: This study aims to narratively synthesise AR applications limited to dental extractions and to illustrate a full AR-guided clinical workflow. Methods: We performed a PRISMA-informed narrative search (PubMed + Cochrane, January 2015–June 2025) focused exclusively on AR applications in dental extractions and found nine eligible studies. Results: These pilot reports—covering impacted third molars, supernumerary incisors, canines, and cyst-associated teeth—all used marker-less registration on natural dental surfaces and achieved mean target-registration errors below 1 mm with headset set-up times under three minutes; the only translational series (six molars) recorded a mean surgical duration of 21 ± 6 min and a System Usability Scale score of 79. To translate these findings into practice, we describe a case of AR-guided mandibular third-molar extraction. A QR-referenced 3D-printed splint, intra-oral scan, and CBCT were fused to create a colour-coded hologram rendered on a Magic Leap 2 headset. The procedure took 19 min and required only a conservative osteotomy and accurate odontotomy that ended without neurosensory disturbance (VAS pain 2/10 at one week). Conclusions: Collectively, the literature synthesis and clinical demonstration suggest that current AR platforms deliver sub-millimetre accuracy, minimal workflow overhead, and high user acceptance in high-risk extractions while highlighting the need for larger, controlled trials to prove tangible patient benefit.
2025
Pellegrino, G., Barausse, C., Tayeb, S., Vignudelli, E., Casaburi, M., Stradiotti, S., et al. (2025). Augmented Reality in Dental Extractions: Narrative Review and an AR-Guided Impacted Mandibular Third-Molar Case. APPLIED SCIENCES, 15(17), 1-16 [10.3390/app15179723].
Pellegrino, Gerardo; Barausse, Carlo; Tayeb, Subhi; Vignudelli, Elisabetta; Casaburi, Martina; Stradiotti, Stefano; Ferretti, Fabrizio; Cercenelli, La...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/1026847
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