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Judul Current Trends and Future Directions in Prosthetic and Implant Dentistry in the Digital Era (Printed Edition of The Special Issue Published in JCM) / Adolfo Di Fiore (editor); Giulia Brunello (editor)
Pengarang Di Fiore, Adolfo
Brunello, Giulia
Penerbitan Basel : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2022
Deskripsi Fisik 146 p. :ill.
ISBN 978-3-0365-6050-2
Subjek IMPLANT DENTISTRY
Catatan "In recent years the dental field has evolved incredibly due to the introduction of digital technology. Thanks to new devices such as intraoral and facial scanners, different clinical procedures have been facilitated by reducing clinical steps and operative time [1,2]. The most changes have emerged in the discipline of prosthetic dentistry, where advances in technology have provided the ability to realize a crown or an inlay in a few hours. However, such simplification is not of interest only to the daily clinic approach, but also to diagnosis, clinical training, and manufacturing methods. The three-dimensional environment allows clinicians and students to analyze bone quality and quantity, assess the tooth preparation, and to design a new smile. Moreover, the choice to realize types of dental prostheses with different techniques has opened a new scenario in dental materials science. New dental materials have been developed, improving the esthetics, and providing a better potential for long-term su
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Lokasi Akses Online https://www.mdpi.com/books/book/6466-current-trends-and-future-directions-in-prosthetic-and-implant-dentistry-in-the-digital-era

 
No Barcode No. Panggil Akses Lokasi Ketersediaan
167825192 617.60285 Di c Baca di tempat Perpustakaan Pusat - Online Resources
Ebook
Tersedia
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100 1 # $a Di Fiore, Adolfo
245 1 # $a Current Trends and Future Directions in Prosthetic and Implant Dentistry in the Digital Era (Printed Edition of The Special Issue Published in JCM) /$c Adolfo Di Fiore (editor); Giulia Brunello (editor)
260 # # $a Basel :$b MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute,$c 2022
300 # # $a 146 p. : $b ill.
505 # # $a "In recent years the dental field has evolved incredibly due to the introduction of digital technology. Thanks to new devices such as intraoral and facial scanners, different clinical procedures have been facilitated by reducing clinical steps and operative time [1,2]. The most changes have emerged in the discipline of prosthetic dentistry, where advances in technology have provided the ability to realize a crown or an inlay in a few hours. However, such simplification is not of interest only to the daily clinic approach, but also to diagnosis, clinical training, and manufacturing methods. The three-dimensional environment allows clinicians and students to analyze bone quality and quantity, assess the tooth preparation, and to design a new smile. Moreover, the choice to realize types of dental prostheses with different techniques has opened a new scenario in dental materials science. New dental materials have been developed, improving the esthetics, and providing a better potential for long-term survival and stability. Although the development of material through subtractive manufacturing presents better mechanical and surface characteristics than additive manufacturing [3], the future will be additive. This manufacturing method is an eco-friendly technology, due to the lower environmental impact, the reduced waste of materials, and the use of recyclable materials. However, the question of whether digital dentistry is the past, present, or future remains without an answer. A unanimous consensus is not present among clinicians. Some prefer the use of a conventional workflow or use a combined workflow, whereas others apply a completely digital workflow. The reasons are several, but I think that this difference is mainly attributable to the reluctance of clinicians to change their daily workflow. Where the conventional workflow results in the omission of some preparation errors, the digital workflow does not. All clinical steps must be executed with the utmost accuracy. For example, the incorrect management of an interim crown does not allow the control of many problems associated with digital impressions, such as localized bleeding, the retraction technique, and the limits of scanners to acquire the subgingival vertical finish line. Indeed, only high-quality dentistry can take advantage of digital dentistry, more so than poor-quality dentistry. It is fundamental to remember that the patient is the most important person in dental treatment, and therefore, must be the first person that benefits from digital dental procedures. For all clinicians and students, I give one suggestion: think digital for better daily dentistry."
650 # # $a IMPLANT DENTISTRY
700 1 # $a Brunello, Giulia
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990 # # $a 167825192
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