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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
Can you design with your cbct scans?
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<blockquote data-quote="MTDentalTech" data-source="post: 301352" data-attributes="member: 20807"><p>We do tons of AO4 and that was the first thing i said to him when he brought the idea to me, but what i am wanting to do is design a bar basically then cut it and let him screw it in the mouth then weld the difference in. He currently welds an entire bar from scratch in the mouth, so he is looking for an easier way of doing it at time of surgery. Also he temporizing an acrylic denture over it at time of delivery. And wants us to mill a pmma to go over this "bar" then window it out and he relines the bar in in the mouth. this way it can be a longer term temp or even depending on the situation a "definitive restoration". I still think the traditional work flow is better but this could open the door to a definitive all on four restorations at time of surgery, that can hold up and be safe for the patient.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MTDentalTech, post: 301352, member: 20807"] We do tons of AO4 and that was the first thing i said to him when he brought the idea to me, but what i am wanting to do is design a bar basically then cut it and let him screw it in the mouth then weld the difference in. He currently welds an entire bar from scratch in the mouth, so he is looking for an easier way of doing it at time of surgery. Also he temporizing an acrylic denture over it at time of delivery. And wants us to mill a pmma to go over this "bar" then window it out and he relines the bar in in the mouth. this way it can be a longer term temp or even depending on the situation a "definitive restoration". I still think the traditional work flow is better but this could open the door to a definitive all on four restorations at time of surgery, that can hold up and be safe for the patient. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
Can you design with your cbct scans?
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