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drjinglesSpectatorAwesome case…and presentation Glenn…
where Dr. Finkbeiner be?
I remember hebelazin.com…did you use the argon with water? or dry?
I remember he had some coaxial water spray
attached to his…and how did you reflect?
very cool…
Lawrie
Glenn van AsSpectatorHi Lawrie and welcome to this great forum.
I used the Argon at very low settings 0.4 w to just warm up the tissue and glue it together. I never believed it till I saw Larry do it.
He is still in Colorado Springs practicing quietly.
I reflected with a chisel shaped tip that Continuum has that really does a nice job (not as sharp) of cutting the tissue then elevated with a periosteal.
I am pleased with the healing for one week , what do you think .
Glenn
AnonymousSpectatorTo upload pictures;
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Nuno FerreiraSpectatorHi everyone,
Flap 1.5 w (11a/7w)
Osteotomy 2 w (30a/30w)
Placed rich growth factors plasma to induced bone formacion.http://www.sendpix.com/albums/03022110/103357000000035e2a3e7c478ac84419e67923250ebd2f/
Nuno FerreiraSpectatorThanks Ron,
SwpmnSpectatorCool case Glenn! Amazing healing.
Rodger Kurthy has also reported a “swelling” phenomena after crown lengthening with the Biolase Erbium – particularly with respect to the interproximal papillae.
Al
Glenn van AsSpectatorHi Nuno…….neat stuff………..what were you trying to do?
My portuguese is so bad compared to your English!!
All the best.
Glenn
Glenn van AsSpectatorThanks Allen that is great to know because I was one worried person when I saw the 1 day healing.
With time it shrinks back down and I have the satisfaction of knowing that there is more solid tooth under the tissue.
Rod has done alot of perio and traditional crown lengthening and I want to get some small microsurgical instruments to help me raise the flap and some smaller sutures (6.0) to use. IT will make things look neater and more professional but I gotta admit the “laser welding” was pretty cool.
Grin
Glenn
wiemsSpectatorHello fellow lase-ers! I am new to the laser world, just bought a Lares Pocket Pro nd YAG, and am psyched to jump start my perio treatment in my practice. Tell me if I’m wrong, but basically, perio treatments fall into roughly two different categories: Gingivectomy/gingivoplasty or gingival flap w/ SC/RP.
What has been the experience with billing for these procedures? For example, are pre tx estimates necessary or “recommended”? Do single tooth procedures require radiographs and treatment descriptions? Do most insurances cover these procedures as an “80%” or a “50%” procedure?
I know it’s a broad topic that I’m asking about, but if you have any feedback you think may be helpful, let me know!Anyone else out ther with a Lares nd YAG?
PatricioSpectatorHi gang,
I have found this helpful as a tool to help me think of situation when I will use the laser during treatment. We made a list of 19 or 20 uses of the laser such as tissue contouring for class V’s, removal of fibromas and periodontal treatment. We use this as part of our new patient comprehensive examination and over time I am naturally checking this list off in my mind as I am calling out things to be charted. I was finding in some cases after we had planned treatment and secured a financial arrangement and I began treatment I would use the laser for tissue recontouring, pocket reduction or something and not charge for it when I should have known in advance. Now with this little list checked off at the examination and available when I plan treatment I address the use of the laser for soft tissue applications and build in the appropriate fee. This started me thinking about new procedures in our office and has expanded what we do as well as our bottom line. Just a thought. What are you doing?
Pat
wiemsSpectatorI see this type of thing a lot, and when I do, I go for the ceramic onlay. I knw some people would say “not on a 2nd molar”, but most ceramic failures are due to a bonding problem. You obviously can acheive a dry field, since the remaining tooth is supragingival and you have a rubber dam in place. I have tons of these out there in Empress 1 up to 11 years old, but I have recently switched to Authentic pressed porcelain due to some positive feedback on the material from my lab. They say it’s stonger than empress. Back to the prep, I would take down the buccal cusp also, make sure that bothe M and D contacts are broken, and bond te ceramic to the acre of dentin and enamel that you have left. I would temporize with some fermit or triad molded and locked between the adjacent teeth, tell the patient that he or she is off the hook for flossing for the next couple of weeks, and then bond that baby in at the delivery appointment. It works great, and the tissue stays much healthier around the ceramic due to the undetectable supragingival margins.
PatricioSpectatorHi,
Numo,
You give me courage!
Pat
PatricioSpectatorAl and Bob have suggested that many of the teeth we numb successfully with the laser are the same teeth which may well be worked upon without the laser and no anesthesia. I feel this is true in my hands as well and toward that end I have found a bit of a short cut with some patients. When I prep the first tooth with laser anesthesia and all goes well as far as patient sensitivity I have been going to the second and third teeth with less numbing time, sometimes if the lesion is small to medium sized I may continue without any “numb time” at all and find more often than not, all goes well. I am still working on your advice, Mark – patience, patience, patience in the mean time I am using this little short cut. Pick the patient and the lesions and give it a try. I thing Al and Bob could be right.
I had a patient with a very sensitive tooth during crown seating this week. The patient kept moving and it was hard on both of us. I waved the magic laser wand over the tooth at 1.5w 11/7 for 30 seconds and this resolved the issue to tolerable limits for the patient and she appreciated it. It was nice to avoid the local anesthesia needed in the past.
Pat
Glenn van AsSpectatorHi Wiems………thanks for your input. Here is a case I did on Thursday , interesting that you put your post up.
A lady had an onlay placed around 4 years ago and it totally came unbonded. There was alot of decay under it and I placed 2 pins and laser etched and then did a full coverage crown.
The bonding process definitely helps improve fracture resistance but all to often if not done with alot of precision and attention to detail under high magnification, the bonding process can be poor or sloppy.
If done well I agree bonding is the way to go. IF not most cements have no fluoride release and are waiting for failure.
Hope this is interesting and good thread.
Rubber dam and careful bonding technique to ENAMEL are crucial in the success.
In closing I still fell shaky relying only on a bond for my retention of the crown, still feel shaky about 1 and 2 step bonds (just heard a lecture from Dr. Franklin Tay that confirmed some of my fears yesterday) and still try to do as much as possible to hold crowns on.
Cya
Glenn
[img]https://www.laserdentistryforum.com/attachments/upload/Resize of Onlay replacement_p1_p1.JPG[/img]
[img]https://www.laserdentistryforum.com/attachments/upload/Resize of Onlay replacement_p1_p2.JPG[/img]
wiemsSpectatorHey Glenn – – That was a nice recovery from a not so pretty clinical situation. In all of the porcelain onlays that i have done, i have seen them debond from time to time. My thoughts are that there was decay left there from the previous prep, which, of course, would compromise the bond. There are many factors I am sure that you know that will cause bond failures, namely improper porcelain etch, silanation, bonding technique, contaminated tooth surface, improper isolation, occlusion, prep design… the list goes on. A failure that I see more often is the failure of large core buildups bonded entirely to dentin. Although I think that the pins will help hold the core in place, you are still left with the situation where you have to now put your crown margin another 2 mm beyond the buildup ideally to be on sound tooth structure, which most likely paces your margin on cementum and quite subgingival. I guess the laser will help with getting your impression, but the sulcus will never be as healthy long term as it would be if you went with the onlay to start. I am not going to say that I haven’t redone work that failed, but I am comfortable with the success that I see with bonded full coverage porcelain onlays.
Did Dr. Tay say anything about the self etching bonding agents such as simplicity or I-bond? -
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