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  • #10808
    DrsumitraDrsumitra
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    Registered On: 06/10/2011
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    Rodrigo Marino is working on a project that will allow dentists to peer into patients’ mouths on the other side of the country.
    The dental specialist is among a group of Melbourne University boffins experimenting with high-speed internet connections they hope will revolutionise healthcare in Australia.
    The university’s Institute for a Broadband-Enabled Society has replicated the speed of the National Broadband Network to explore how it can be used when it is extended across the country.
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    Associate Professor Marino hopes some of the most isolated people in Australia will receive high-quality dental care over fast internet connections.
    The institute’s teledentistry project allows dentists to conduct remote examinations using high-resolution video.
    A dental assistant uses a wand-like camera to stream video from inside a patient’s mouth to a dentist’s computer in real time.
    The dentist can talk to the assistant using a second video feed. The patient’s X-rays and medical files can also be transmitted during the consultation.
    ‘‘You can have access to world experts,’’ Professor Marino says.
    The institute will test the technology in Victorian nursing homes next month. ‘‘This is the closest we can get to a real-life examination. There is no physical presence but the technology allows us to talk with a real person, exchange files, pictures, X-rays, anything.’’
    Institute spokesman Adam Lodders says the institute brings together academics from many disciplines to explore new uses for high-speed internet.
    The network offers download speeds of 100 megabits per second, similar to the NBN.
    The institute has also conducted trials with iPads and social media applications to reduce loneliness in elderly people at risk of social isolation.

     

     

    #15811
    DrsumitraDrsumitra
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     ERRORS IN PHYSICAL IMPRESSIONS CAN BE COSTLY
    Inherent errors exist in the making of an analog impression as well as errors introduced in making the corresponding cast. Dimensional changes, in both the impression material and the stone with which the cast is made, can produce inaccuracies. Even in the best practitioner’s and dental technician’s hands, air bubbles, voids, tears, blood/saliva/other contamination, and distortion due to a variety of causes, can render a hard fought impression unusable. Pinning the dies can make unstable models. Any of these problems can result in extensive adjustments to get the proper occlusal or interproximal fit, or in the worst case, may make the impression worthless. Compounding the problem are issues that may not be readily apparent, only to be discovered in the process of remaking a restoration or appliance.

    ADVANCES IN INTRAORAL SCANNING TECHNOLOGIES
    Technological alternatives have existed for many years in the form of digital impression systems. The first to market in 1987 was the CEREC 1 (Siemens), which used a 3-dimensional (3-D) scanner and optical powder on the teeth to create a virtual model. The development of the infrared camera (CEREC 1) was one of the first steps in providing the profession with a digital practice experience. For nearly 20 years, CEREC was the only system capable of direct intraoral digital impression making. In addition, with the CEREC system, the practitioner could use CAD/CAM technology to fabricate one visit inlays, onlays, and crowns. Over the years, software and hardware improvements, as well as restorative material improvements have made it easier for the practitioner to make durable and aesthetic one visit CEREC restorations.

    Until the recent introduction of CEREC AC powered by BlueCam (Sirona), in January of 2009, the imaging device remained unchanged. According to the manufacturer’s Web site, the latest “CEREC BlueCam captures highly detailed images using a powerful (short wavelength) blue light-emitting diode.” This technology is 2x faster than infrared scanning, and it can now be done in a few minutes.1 This new camera system takes exceptionally accurate images, and improves further on the previous version offered by allowing imaging of an entire arch. However, it does continue to require an optical powder medium to properly image the desired area.

    More recently, a number of competitive technologies have entered the market. The E4D Dentist System, launched in 2008, also creates a finished restoration in one visit and unlike CEREC, does not require the use of a powder in most instances.

    In the field of dedicated 3-D impression scanners, where final restorations are produced at the dental laboratory, there are several systems on the market:

    CEREC Connect (Sirona) is a Web-based communication platform designed exclusively for use by CEREC dentists and Sirona inLab laboratories. This allows CEREC dentists to electronically transmit a digitally-scanned impression to the inLab laboratory of their choice.

    Lava Chairside Oral Scanner (C.O.S.) (3M ESPE) was launched in 2008. This system produces a digital impression from a recorded video sequence and requires a light powdering. Upon completion, the impression is forwarded to 3M ESPE, where a model is created using stereolithography.

    The iTero Digital Impression System (Cadent) was launched in 2006. It uses parallel confocal imaging, which utilizes laser and optical scanning to digitally capture the surface and contours of the tooth and gingival structures. The iTero scanner captures 100,000 points of laser light and has perfect focus images of more than 300 focal depths of the tooth structure. This approach, which differs from the technology employed by CEREC and 3M ESPE, does not require the need for scanning powder. The iTero images are converted by Cadent into a working model that is sent to the dental laboratory of the doctor’s choice.

    #15829
    drmithiladrmithila
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    Dentists may soon be able to utilize technology in a way that many likely thought was impossible.

    A group of Melbourne University researchers are utilizing high-speed Internet connections to experiment with looking into a patient’s mouth via the Internet. If successful, this would obviously provide the opportunity for people in remote areas to receive necessary dental care without traveling far distances.

    The dental examinations are done with high-resolution video. A dental assistant utilizes a wand-like camera to stream the video from inside the patient’s mouth to a computer, all in real time.

    There’s a second feed that allows the dentist to speak the assistant. X-rays and medical files can be transmitted as well.

    The technology will continue to be tested to see if it’s practical to put it in place in Australia.

    This can be done thanks to the Broadband-Enabled Society at the University of Melbourne because it has Internet speeds of 100 MB per second. A slower-speed Internet connection would not be capable of this type of procedure.

     

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