Title of article
Coverage error of commercial skin pigments as compared to human facial skin tones
Author/Authors
Hungerford، نويسنده , , Elizabeth and Beatty، نويسنده , , Mark W. and Marx، نويسنده , , David B. and Simetich، نويسنده , , Bobby and Wee، نويسنده , , Alvin G.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
6
From page
986
To page
991
Abstract
AbstractObjectives
unknown if present-day pigments used for intrinsic colouration of maxillofacial prostheses are representative of human facial skin tones. This studyʹs purpose was to measure L*a*b* values of pigmented elastomers coloured by eleven skin tone pigments and determine coverage error (CE) when the pigments were compared to human facial lip and nose colour data.
s
n tone pigments were combined at 0.1%, 1% and 10% by weight with A-2186 elastomer (n = 3). L*a*b* values were measured with a spectrophotometer and group means were used to calculate ΔE* colour differences with each L*a*b* value obtained for human nose and lip. Pigmented elastomer CEs were calculated for nose and lip. Results were compared to CEs for proposed shade guide colours obtained from clustering analyses of facial skin colours.
s
ues of pigmented elastomers generally were higher than those measured for nose and lip, whereas a* values were lower. CEs for pigmented elastomers were higher than those obtained from the proposed shade guide obtained from clustered skin measurements.
sions
l, the current commercial elastomers appeared to be too white and not red enough to adequately match the skin tones of the subject population. Adjustments must be made to the existing pigmenting system in order to adequately match the skin colours of the study population.
al significance
eation of a shade guide and a collection of intrinsic pigments representing the realm of human facial skin colours would greatly decrease the time a patient must sit while the clinician is obtaining an acceptable colour match for the silicone to be used for processing the final prosthesis, thereby increasing both patient satisfaction and clinician productivity.
Keywords
Prosthesis colouring , Maxillofacial elastomer , Colour differences , aesthetics
Journal title
Journal of Dentistry
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Dentistry
Record number
2130090
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