Application of age estimation methods based on teeth eruption: how easy is Olze method to use?

Int J Legal Med. 2014 Sep;128(5):841-4. doi: 10.1007/s00414-014-1006-0. Epub 2014 Apr 30.

Abstract

The development of new methods for age estimation has become with time an urgent issue because of the increasing immigration, in order to estimate accurately the age of those subjects who lack valid identity documents. Methods of age estimation are divided in skeletal and dental ones, and among the latter, Olze's method is one of the most recent, since it was introduced in 2010 with the aim to identify the legal age of 18 and 21 years by evaluating the different stages of development of the periodontal ligament of the third molars with closed root apices. The present study aims at verifying the applicability of the method to the daily forensic practice, with special focus on the interobserver repeatability. Olze's method was applied by three different observers (two physicians and one dentist without a specific training in Olze's method) to 61 orthopantomograms from subjects of mixed ethnicity aged between 16 and 51 years. The analysis took into consideration the lower third molars. The results provided by the different observers were then compared in order to verify the interobserver error. Results showed that interobserver error varies between 43 and 57 % for the right lower third molar (M48) and between 23 and 49 % for the left lower third molar (M38). Chi-square test did not show significant differences according to the side of teeth and type of professional figure. The results prove that Olze's method is not easy to apply when used by not adequately trained personnel, because of an intrinsic interobserver error. Since it is however a crucial method in age determination, it should be used only by experienced observers after an intensive and specific training.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Age Determination by Teeth / methods*
  • Female
  • Forensic Dentistry
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Molar, Third / diagnostic imaging*
  • Molar, Third / growth & development
  • Observer Variation
  • Periodontal Ligament / diagnostic imaging*
  • Periodontal Ligament / growth & development
  • Radiography, Panoramic
  • Tooth Eruption*
  • Young Adult