1. Some inconsistencies in Demirjian's method
- Author
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Giuseppe Quaremba, Mariano Paternoster, Luigi Laino, Claudio Buccelli, Alberto Laino, Vincenzo Graziano, Pierpaolo Petrone, Quaremba, Giuseppe, Buccelli, Claudio, Graziano, Vincenzo, Laino, Alberto, Laino, Luigi, Paternoster, Mariano, and Petrone, Pierpaolo
- Subjects
Scoring system ,Adolescent ,Forensic anthropology ,Orthopantomography ,Eu countries ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Tooth Apex ,Statistics ,Humans ,030216 legal & forensic medicine ,Child ,Models, Statistical ,Age-disputed children ,030206 dentistry ,Chronological age ,Demirjian's method ,Age estimation ,Age Determination by Teeth ,Legal medicine ,Psychology ,Law ,Dental maturity ,Tooth ,Algorithms ,Tooth Calcification - Abstract
Nowadays, given the massive migration movements toward and across EU countries, age assessment can be highly useful for estimating the real age of asylum seekers or in medico-legal assessments of age-disputed children charged with criminal acts. Demirjian et al.'s dental maturity score is currently a dental scoring system universally adopted for age assessment of unidentified children. Here we explore the biological compatibility of Demirjian's scores with respect to the estimation of certain chronological ages of forensic interest through an algorithm based on the theory of constrained graphs integrated with combinatory analysis. Rather than simply respect Demirjian's indications (direct method) on a sample of children, we followed a reverse procedure (indirect method) as follows: i. chronological age selection and identification of the corresponding maturity score (MS); ii. determination of all the possible combinations of dental maturity stages whose sum of the scores is equal to the MS under consideration; iii. checking for all such possible combinations the biological congruity of the state of maturity of each tooth compared to the chronological age initially chosen. By evidencing dental development inconsistencies, our mathematical approach explains why Demirjian's method typically overestimates age. Therefore, even if the method in question remains the recommended way to assess individual dental maturity, it should definitely be considered unsuitable for application in certain forensic scenarios, particularly as regards the most disputed age range 14-16 years.
- Published
- 2016