Background/Objectives: Tooth colour perception is critical to aesthetic outcomes in restorative dentistry and patient satisfaction. Psychological and gender-related factors may modulate individual colour perception. This study evaluates the influence of gender and emotional state on tooth colour self-perception in healthy adults. Methods: A prospective observational study was conducted on 100 adults (50 women, 50 men; mean age 32.2 years) without anterior restorations or systemic disease. Tooth shade was assessed by (i) operator visual matching using the VITA Classical A1–D4 guide, (ii) patient self-selection with the same guide, and (iii) spectrophotometric measurement (Spectroshade Micro). Emotional state was measured using the abbreviated Profile of Mood States (POMS-SF); the OHIP-14 was administered to characterise oral health–related quality of life. Statistical analyses included the Chi-squared test, Kendall’s τ, and t-test, with p < 0.05 considered significant. Results: A significant association between gender and the magnitude of patient–operator discrepancy was found (p = 0.013): women showed higher rates of complete agreement or two-step differences, whereas men more frequently exhibited one-step differences. Positive mood parameters (feeling active, energetic, satisfied) correlated with greater patient–operator agreement (τ = 0.17–0.23, p < 0.05). Significant association was neither observed between patient self-selection and spectrophotometric measurement (p = 0.225), nor between facial undertone, facial colour contrast, or depressive mood levels. Conclusions: Gender and emotional state influence subjective tooth colour perception. Positive mood is associated with improved agreement between perceived and clinically assessed colour. These findings support a personalised, gender- and mood-informed approach to shade selection and patient management in aesthetic dentistry.

Influence of Gender and Emotional State on Tooth Colour Perception: A Clinical Study / Mazur, Marta; Ndokaj, Artnora; Westland, Stephen; Ottolenghi, Livia; Ripari, Francesca; Ardan, Roman; Piroli, Marina; Grassi, Roberta; Nardi, Gianna Maria. - In: PROSTHESIS. - ISSN 2673-1592. - 7:6(2025). [10.3390/prosthesis7060138]

Influence of Gender and Emotional State on Tooth Colour Perception: A Clinical Study

Mazur, Marta
Primo
Conceptualization
;
Ndokaj, Artnora
Secondo
Methodology
;
Ottolenghi, Livia
Supervision
;
Ripari, Francesca
Project Administration
;
Grassi, Roberta
Methodology
;
Nardi, Gianna Maria
Ultimo
Conceptualization
2025

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Tooth colour perception is critical to aesthetic outcomes in restorative dentistry and patient satisfaction. Psychological and gender-related factors may modulate individual colour perception. This study evaluates the influence of gender and emotional state on tooth colour self-perception in healthy adults. Methods: A prospective observational study was conducted on 100 adults (50 women, 50 men; mean age 32.2 years) without anterior restorations or systemic disease. Tooth shade was assessed by (i) operator visual matching using the VITA Classical A1–D4 guide, (ii) patient self-selection with the same guide, and (iii) spectrophotometric measurement (Spectroshade Micro). Emotional state was measured using the abbreviated Profile of Mood States (POMS-SF); the OHIP-14 was administered to characterise oral health–related quality of life. Statistical analyses included the Chi-squared test, Kendall’s τ, and t-test, with p < 0.05 considered significant. Results: A significant association between gender and the magnitude of patient–operator discrepancy was found (p = 0.013): women showed higher rates of complete agreement or two-step differences, whereas men more frequently exhibited one-step differences. Positive mood parameters (feeling active, energetic, satisfied) correlated with greater patient–operator agreement (τ = 0.17–0.23, p < 0.05). Significant association was neither observed between patient self-selection and spectrophotometric measurement (p = 0.225), nor between facial undertone, facial colour contrast, or depressive mood levels. Conclusions: Gender and emotional state influence subjective tooth colour perception. Positive mood is associated with improved agreement between perceived and clinically assessed colour. These findings support a personalised, gender- and mood-informed approach to shade selection and patient management in aesthetic dentistry.
2025
tooth colour perception; gender differences; mood; aesthetic dentistry; colourimetry; psychological factors; shade matching
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Influence of Gender and Emotional State on Tooth Colour Perception: A Clinical Study / Mazur, Marta; Ndokaj, Artnora; Westland, Stephen; Ottolenghi, Livia; Ripari, Francesca; Ardan, Roman; Piroli, Marina; Grassi, Roberta; Nardi, Gianna Maria. - In: PROSTHESIS. - ISSN 2673-1592. - 7:6(2025). [10.3390/prosthesis7060138]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1753770
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