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Products to look for at Chicago Midwinter 2017: Part 2

One highlight of the upcoming 2017 Chicago Dental Society Midwinter Meeting will be the vast exhibit hall, where hundreds of companies will showcase their products. Here we bring you a preview of new and recently introduced products in two categories, anesthesia and restoratives, to look for while you’re walking through the exhibit hall in McCormick Place in Chicago. You can see the first part of the new products preview here.

Biolase receives FDA clearance for updated laser

Laser and CAD/CAM scanner company Biolase has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 510(k) clearance for its Waterlase Express laser system. Biolase said Waterlase Express is nearly one-quarter the size and one-third the weight of its Waterlase iPlus system at nearly half the retail price in the U.S. This product’s clearance follows the company receiving FDA clearance for its Epic Pro laser system in January.

Week in Review: Chicago new products preview; amalgam separator lawsuit; TMD splints

Dear DrBicuspid Member, One of the pleasures of the Chicago Dental Society Midwinter Meeting is the vast exhibit hall at McCormick Place with hundreds of companies showcasing their products. While the meeting opens on February 23, our coverage starts today with the first part of a preview of new and recently introduced products to look for while you’re walking through the exhibit hall. See the new products here. Also this

Products to look for at Chicago Midwinter 2017: Part 1

A highlight of the upcoming 2017 Chicago Dental Society Midwinter Meeting will be the vast exhibit hall, where hundreds of companies will showcase their products. Here we bring you a preview of new and recently introduced products to look for while you’re walking through the exhibit hall in McCormick Place in Chicago. Part one of our preview of new products on display at the Midwinter Meeting includes cosmetic, imaging, and

Lawsuit seeks to reinstate EPA amalgam separator rule

Did your dental practice purchase an amalgam separator when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced new mercury waste regulations in December 2016? Many practices did. But because of uncertainty around a memo by U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration ordering the EPA and other agencies to withdraw unpublished U.S. government regulations, there is now a question about the status of the mercury waste regulations. It’s a question a new lawsuit

Can functional medicine help your patients?

Have you heard the term “functional medicine” floating around the internet? Do you know what it means? Alvin Danenberg, DDS. Many traditional medical and dental practitioners do not embrace the concepts of functional medicine, but I do. Let me explain how functional medicine could actually benefit your patient’s dental health. I am a traditionally educated periodontist and have been in practice for more than 40 years. Four years ago, I

Are splints beneficial for TMDs? It depends

Nearly 100 million people in the U.S. have temporomandibular disorders (TMDs), and approximately 3 million splints are made each year for their treatment, but questions remain about their effectiveness. Therefore, the authors of a new study sought to provide more evidence on their effects. Stabilization splints appear to be effective for TMDs in the short term, but they are no more useful than other therapies in the long term, they

Can you trust implant dentistry consensus guidelines?

Researchers evaluated consensus guidelines published in major implant dentistry journals and found that methodological improvement is needed, according to a new study. The authors said that would buoy the quality and trust of information needed to make proper clinical decisions, and they recommended adherence to high and transparent standards. “It is time to move forward to improve the quality of clinical guidelines, which can provide a bridge between evidence and

Legal Cases: 24 fillings on virgin teeth

HuangshanDental.com is pleased to present the next column from two lawyers who spend every day defending dentists in litigation and before the licensing board. The purpose of this column is to offer our readers a fresh perspective on common practice and risk management issues from attorneys who litigate these issues in the real world. A 23-year-old recent college graduate presented to a general dentist (our eventual client) for a routine

Week in Review: 24 fillings on virgin teeth; dental students’ empathy; adding dental to Medicare

Dear DrBicuspid Member, If evidence of decay can’t be seen on radiographic images, but you find it on clinical examination of a patient, especially a new patient, how do you document and justify clinical treatment? In their latest Legal Case, William S. Spiegel and Dr. Marc R. Leffler detail what happened to a general practitioner when a 23-year-old woman came into the office for a routine exam As they write, finding

Do CBCT images change endodontic treatment planning?

A treatment plan is usually based on clinical experience, clinical information, and information obtained from diagnostic imaging. But when it comes to endodontic treatment planning, especially for a difficult case, do the images from a cone-beam CT (CBCT) scan actually influence how a specialist proceeds? The answer from researchers in Spain is yes — CBCT scans can change the decisions specialists make in endodontic cases. Their study was published in

Should Medicare include dental coverage? Experts weigh in

Since Medicare was created in 1965, the U.S. has put a man on the moon and a rover on Mars, the internet was created, and 3D-printed restorations went from science fiction to clinical practice. Yet for all that’s changed since the 1960s, Medicare still excludes dental care — and some experts think it’s time to change that. In the U.S., health insurance is still largely tied to employment, so it’s

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