Implant Tribune U.S. No. 8, 2011
AAOMS in Philly
/ Surgically accelerated orthodontics in implant treatment
/ Validating the oral-systemic health connection
/ Upcoming AAID annual meeting: ‘Stack the Deck in Your Favor’
/ ‘Ride the Wave to Success in Dentistry’ at the Yankee Dental Congress 2012
/ Win a trip to New York City and join us for the Dental Tribune Awards
/ Industry
/ Products
Array
(
[post_data] => WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 55748
[post_author] => 0
[post_date] => 2011-08-19 11:35:39
[post_date_gmt] => 2011-08-19 11:35:39
[post_content] =>
[post_title] => Implant Tribune U.S. No. 8, 2011
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => closed
[ping_status] => closed
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => implant-tribune-u-s-no-8-2011-0811
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-21 19:09:04
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:09:04
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/epaper/itus0811/
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => epaper
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)
[id] => 55748
[id_hash] => 68e2c4fc1b2399e36a570d1626d487dbfa06fa81c514cf215940efb8c2b957f7
[post_type] => epaper
[post_date] => 2011-08-19 11:35:39
[fields] => Array
(
[pdf] => Array
(
[ID] => 55749
[id] => 55749
[title] => ITUS0811.pdf
[filename] => ITUS0811.pdf
[filesize] => 0
[url] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/wp-content/uploads/ITUS0811.pdf
[link] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/epaper/implant-tribune-u-s-no-8-2011-0811/itus0811-pdf-2/
[alt] =>
[author] => 0
[description] =>
[caption] =>
[name] => itus0811-pdf-2
[status] => inherit
[uploaded_to] => 55748
[date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[modified] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[menu_order] => 0
[mime_type] => application/pdf
[type] => application
[subtype] => pdf
[icon] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/wp-includes/images/media/document.png
)
[cf_issue_name] => Implant Tribune U.S. No. 8, 2011
[contents] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[from] => 01
[to] => 01
[title] => AAOMS in Philly
[description] => AAOMS in Philly
)
[1] => Array
(
[from] => 01
[to] => 04
[title] => Surgically accelerated orthodontics in implant treatment
[description] => Surgically accelerated orthodontics in implant treatment
)
[2] => Array
(
[from] => 01
[to] => 09
[title] => Validating the oral-systemic health connection
[description] => Validating the oral-systemic health connection
)
[3] => Array
(
[from] => 10
[to] => 10
[title] => Upcoming AAID annual meeting: ‘Stack the Deck in Your Favor’
[description] => Upcoming AAID annual meeting: ‘Stack the Deck in Your Favor’
)
[4] => Array
(
[from] => 14
[to] => 14
[title] => ‘Ride the Wave to Success in Dentistry’ at the Yankee Dental Congress 2012
[description] => ‘Ride the Wave to Success in Dentistry’ at the Yankee Dental Congress 2012
)
[5] => Array
(
[from] => 17
[to] => 17
[title] => Win a trip to New York City and join us for the Dental Tribune Awards
[description] => Win a trip to New York City and join us for the Dental Tribune Awards
)
[6] => Array
(
[from] => 18
[to] => 18
[title] => Industry
[description] => Industry
)
[7] => Array
(
[from] => 20
[to] => 23
[title] => Products
[description] => Products
)
)
)
[permalink] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/epaper/implant-tribune-u-s-no-8-2011-0811/
[post_title] => Implant Tribune U.S. No. 8, 2011
[client] =>
[client_slug] =>
[pages_generated] =>
[pages] => Array
(
[1] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-0.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-0.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-0.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-0.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-0.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-0.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[2] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-1.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-1.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-1.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-1.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-1.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-1.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[3] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-2.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-2.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-2.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-2.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-2.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-2.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[4] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-3.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-3.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-3.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-3.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-3.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-3.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[5] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-4.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-4.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-4.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-4.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-4.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-4.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[6] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-5.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-5.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-5.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-5.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-5.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-5.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[7] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-6.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-6.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-6.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-6.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-6.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-6.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[post_data] => WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 55750
[post_author] => 0
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_date_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content] =>
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-7-ad-55750
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => closed
[ping_status] => closed
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => epaper-55748-page-7-ad-55750
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-7-ad/
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => ad
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)
[id] => 55750
[id_hash] => 57a9f1c9b40c8743b3a21036bf11fc47071bb10385d6a3dcc37a489be4ff08af
[post_type] => ad
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[fields] => Array
(
[url] => http://www.dental-tribune.com/companies/content/id/360
[link] => URL
)
[permalink] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-7-ad-55750/
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-7-ad-55750
[post_status] => publish
[position] => 28.59,34.97,67.15,62.02
[belongs_to_epaper] => 55748
[page] => 7
[cached] => false
)
)
[html_content] =>
)
[8] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-7.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-7.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-7.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-7.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-7.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-7.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[9] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-8.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-8.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-8.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-8.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-8.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-8.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[post_data] => WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 55751
[post_author] => 0
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_date_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content] =>
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-9-ad-55751
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => closed
[ping_status] => closed
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => epaper-55748-page-9-ad-55751
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-9-ad/
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => ad
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)
[id] => 55751
[id_hash] => 9cbc639a8525792c2d87160cfce69ff9823bd565e302bed3ed78dd9746754b01
[post_type] => ad
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[fields] => Array
(
[url] => http://www.dental-tribune.com/companies/content/id/1558
[link] => URL
)
[permalink] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-9-ad-55751/
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-9-ad-55751
[post_status] => publish
[position] => 28.59,35.25,65.61,58.19
[belongs_to_epaper] => 55748
[page] => 9
[cached] => false
)
)
[html_content] =>
)
[10] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-9.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-9.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-9.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-9.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-9.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-9.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[11] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-10.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-10.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-10.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-10.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-10.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-10.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[12] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-11.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-11.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-11.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-11.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-11.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-11.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[13] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-12.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-12.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-12.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-12.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-12.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-12.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[14] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-13.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-13.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-13.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-13.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-13.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-13.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[15] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-14.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-14.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-14.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-14.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-14.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-14.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[16] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-15.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-15.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-15.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-15.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-15.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-15.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[post_data] => WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 55752
[post_author] => 0
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_date_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content] =>
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-16-ad-55752
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => closed
[ping_status] => closed
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => epaper-55748-page-16-ad-55752
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-16-ad/
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => ad
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)
[id] => 55752
[id_hash] => 7b85086683f1b086fd012d488043b3a2c5274ae3d6e851ab1d09f4dc913b409e
[post_type] => ad
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[fields] => Array
(
[url] => http://www.dtstudyclub.com/
[link] => URL
)
[permalink] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-16-ad-55752/
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-16-ad-55752
[post_status] => publish
[position] => 0.02,-0.55,94.95,100.28
[belongs_to_epaper] => 55748
[page] => 16
[cached] => false
)
)
[html_content] =>
)
[17] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-16.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-16.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-16.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-16.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-16.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-16.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[18] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-17.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-17.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-17.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-17.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-17.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-17.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[post_data] => WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 55753
[post_author] => 0
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_date_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content] =>
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-18-ad-55753
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => closed
[ping_status] => closed
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => epaper-55748-page-18-ad-55753
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-18-ad/
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => ad
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)
[id] => 55753
[id_hash] => ac57ec5c47393cabdd3653b44ca33547c4316134648fe422168c18c3f7f31842
[post_type] => ad
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[fields] => Array
(
[url] => http://www.dental-tribune.com/companies/content/id/25
[link] => URL
)
[permalink] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-18-ad-55753/
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-18-ad-55753
[post_status] => publish
[position] => 6.97,49.45,86.46,45.36
[belongs_to_epaper] => 55748
[page] => 18
[cached] => false
)
)
[html_content] =>
)
[19] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-18.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-18.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-18.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-18.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-18.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-18.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[post_data] => WP_Post Object
(
[ID] => 55754
[post_author] => 0
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_date_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content] =>
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-19-ad-55754
[post_excerpt] =>
[post_status] => publish
[comment_status] => closed
[ping_status] => closed
[post_password] =>
[post_name] => epaper-55748-page-19-ad-55754
[to_ping] =>
[pinged] =>
[post_modified] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_modified_gmt] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[post_content_filtered] =>
[post_parent] => 0
[guid] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-19-ad/
[menu_order] => 0
[post_type] => ad
[post_mime_type] =>
[comment_count] => 0
[filter] => raw
)
[id] => 55754
[id_hash] => a52c9c701244b943443a0ffbe78bfd4e83c64443c82c30bfc63ff06761e4fa32
[post_type] => ad
[post_date] => 2024-10-21 19:08:58
[fields] => Array
(
[url] => http://www.gnydm.com/
[link] => URL
)
[permalink] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/ad/epaper-55748-page-19-ad-55754/
[post_title] => epaper-55748-page-19-ad-55754
[post_status] => publish
[position] => 0.79,0.27,90.73,100
[belongs_to_epaper] => 55748
[page] => 19
[cached] => false
)
)
[html_content] =>
)
[20] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-19.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-19.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-19.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-19.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-19.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-19.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[21] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-20.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-20.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-20.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-20.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-20.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-20.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[22] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-21.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-21.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-21.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-21.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-21.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-21.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[23] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-22.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-22.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-22.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-22.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-22.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-22.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
[24] => Array
(
[image_url] => Array
(
[2000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-23.jpg
[1000] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-23.jpg
[200] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/200/page-23.jpg
)
[key] => Array
(
[2000] => 55748-b404c0d8/2000/page-23.jpg
[1000] => 55748-b404c0d8/1000/page-23.jpg
[200] => 55748-b404c0d8/200/page-23.jpg
)
[ads] => Array
(
)
[html_content] =>
)
)
[pdf_filetime] => 1729537738
[s3_key] => 55748-b404c0d8
[pdf] => ITUS0811.pdf
[pdf_location_url] => https://e.dental-tribune.com/tmp/dental-tribune-com/55748/ITUS0811.pdf
[pdf_location_local] => /var/www/vhosts/e.dental-tribune.com/httpdocs/tmp/dental-tribune-com/55748/ITUS0811.pdf
[should_regen_pages] => 1
[pdf_url] => https://epaper-dental-tribune.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/55748-b404c0d8/epaper.pdf
[pages_text] => Array
(
[1] =>
N
IO
IT
ED
MS
AO
LA
IA
IMPLANT TRIBUNE
SP
EC
The World’s Dental Implant Newspaper · U.S. Edition
August 2011
www.implant-tribune.com
AAID heads to Vegas
The new i-CAT Precise
Win a trip to New York!
Figure out how to stack
the deck in your favor
uPage
Vol. 6, No. 8
Learn what sets this new
technology apart from others
Find out how you can enter
the Dental Tribune Awards
10
uPage
17
uPage
23
AAOMS in Philly
Annual meeting takes place
Sept. 12–17 in Pennsylvania
Fig. 1: A very resorbed ridge in the
edentulous area is evident together
with bone dehiscence on teeth #31, #42
and #44. A regeneration with xenogeneic bone of bovine origine (Endobone, BIOMET 3i) and a resorbable
membrane (Osseoguard, BIOMET 3i)
was performed. (Photos/Provided by
Dr. Federico Brugnami)
By Federico Brugnami, DDS,
and Alfonso Caiazzo, DDS
Abstract
Multidisciplinary treatment requires
excellent communication and coordination among clinicians in a variety of fields. Although this can be
difficult to achieve at first, interdisciplinary collaboration usually results
in efficient treatment that patients
appreciate and benefit from.
g IT page 2
Philadelphia is the site of the AAOMS 93rd Annual Meeting, Scientific
Sessions and Exhibition, which takes place Sept. 12–17 at the Pennsylvania Convention Center. (Photo/www.sxc.hu)
Validating the oral-systemic health connection
By Barry L. Musikant, DDS
How does one go about becoming familiar with an avenue of
health improvement that we have
in the past paid little or no attention to, at least on a professional
level, yet has major impact on
our patient’s oral health? I am
Dental Tribune America
116 West 23rd St., Ste. 500
New York, NY 10011
Surgically
accelerated
orthodontics
in implant
treatment
The AAOMS 93rd Annual Meeting, Scientific Sessions and Exhibition will take place
Sept. 12–17 at the Pennsylvania Convention
Center, located at the Philadelphia Marriott.
The meeting will include a variety of
features such as Anesthesia Update, Maxillofacial Oncology Program, Symposia, Surgical Mini-Lectures and Clinics, Professional
Allied Staff Courses, Practice Management
Clinics, Lunch and Learn Sessions, Poster
and Abstract Sessions, Corporate Forum Sessions, and Faculty and Resident Programs.
Speakers will include Daniel R Cullum,
DDS; Michael D. Turner, DDS, MD; Joshua
Lubek, DDS, MD; Joshua Lubek, DDS, MD;
Daniel Buchbinder, DMD, MD; Thomas R.
Flynn, DMD; Anthony Sclar, DMD; Steven
M. Sullivan, DDS; Bach T. Le, DDS, MD; Paul
Tiwana, DDS, MD; and many more.
For more information, see www.aaoms.
org/annual_meeting/2011. IT
referring to the nutritional status
of our patients (and ourselves) and
the implications it has on our general health. The central question is
whether or not there is adequate
validity in the quantification of our
nutritional status as a measure of
our health to apply it to our patients.
Secondarily, but of obvious clinical
importance, is whether or not the
technology exists that would allow
us to make quantitative measurements.
In terms of answering the first
question, one of the first studies that
caught my attention was Munoz et al
in a paper titled, “Effects of a Nutritional Supplement on Periodontal
Status,” published in the May 2001
issue of Compendium.1 Researchers
at Loma Linda University studied
the impact of an antioxidant-rich
oral supplement on 63 patients ranging in age from 20 to 70 years and
diagnosed with gingivitis and Type II
periodontal disease during a 60-day
double-blind trial.
The participants were random-
ly assigned to two groups — the
experimental group, which took two
tablets each day of the proprietary
blend of antioxidants, and the control group, which took a similarlooking placebo.
Results of the study showed significant improvement in the clinical
parameters and measurements of
gingival inflammation, bleeding on
probing, pocket depth and attachment levels.
“At the 60-day evaluation point, all
subjects receiving the experimental
treatment had significant reduction
in the gingival index, pocket depth
and bleeding index.” Treatment
with this proprietary nutriceutical
appeared to offer patients a noninvasive, systemic, adjunctive protocol to
potentiate in-office therapies.
In a second double-blind study
also conducted at Loma Linda, pocket depth measurements were made
within three groups of patients. The
groups consisted of those who were
g IT page 7
PRSRT STD
U.S. Postage
PAID
San Antonio, TX.
PERMIT #1396
[2] =>
2
Clinical
Implant Tribune | August 2011
f IT page 1
When appropriately coordinated,
the job of each specialist can facilitate the work of the other team
members. For example, orthodontists can be of considerable assistance in periodontal and prosthetic
treatment. Dental alignment of the
arches can facilitate periodontist’s
and prosthodontist’s objectives. This
is done, for example, by aligning the
natural dentition, making possible a
path of insertion for a prosthesis, or
establishing a physiological alveolar
crestal topography to facilitate periodontal surgery.
Orthodontic tooth movement can
then be of substantial benefit for the
patient. Many adults seeking routine
restorative dentistry have misaligned
teeth, which compromises either the
final restorative outcome or the ability to clean the natural dentition.
Orthodontic appliances have
become smaller, less noticeable and
easier to maintain during therapy.
Invisible or lingual appliances further improve the rate of acceptance
by adult patients. Many adults can
now have their teeth aligned to
improve their chewing function and
their smiles with reduced esthetic
effect during therapy.
In addition, implants have become
a major part of the treatment plan
for adults with missing teeth. If
adjacent teeth have drifted into the
edentulous area, orthodontics may
be beneficial for providing adequate
space for implant placement and
restoration.
One of the major problems in
acceptance of orthodontic treatment
by adults is the length of treatment.
For this reason, periodontists and
oral surgeons may be helpful to the
orthodontist, as they can facilitate
the orthodontist’s work and thereby
reduce treatment time. Endosseous
implants can be used to enhance
anchorage and increase movement
control of orthodontically moved
teeth.
Furthermore, the alveolar architecture can be reshaped with periodontally accelerated osteogenic
orthodontic augmentation (PAOO)
surgery to produce the regional
acceleratory phenomenon (RAP),1,2
which results in a vast increase in
osteoblast and osteoclast activity.
The biological result of this is
osteopenia (decrease of bone mineralization without loss of volume).
The clinical result is softer bone,
which may allow faster movement
of teeth.3,4 In multidisciplinary treatment of adult patients, malocclusion
may be associated with tooth loss,
bone resorption and a consequent
Tell us
what
you
think!
IMPLANT TRIBUNE
The World’s Newspaper of Implantology · U.S. Edition
Publisher & Chairman
Torsten Oemus
t.oemus@dental-tribune.com
Chief Operating Officer
Eric Seid
e.seid@dental-tribune.com
Group Editor & Designer
Robin Goodman
r.goodman@dental-tribune.com
Editor in Chief
Sascha A. Jovanovic, DDS, MS
sascha@jovanoviconline.com
Fig. 2: Six months after surgery, one osteointegrated implant (BIOMET 3i)
in the augmented area is placed. A regeneration of the bony fenestration on
tooth #42 was also evident, while the control #44 remained unchanged.
Managing Editor/Designer
Implant, Endo & CAD/CAM Tribunes
Sierra Rendon
s.rendon@dental-tribune.com
Managing Editor/Designer
Ortho Tribune & Show Dailies
Kristine Colker
k.colker@dental-tribune.com
Online Editor
Fred Michmershuizen
f.michmershuizen@dental-tribune.com
Account Manager
Humberto Estrada
h.estrada@dental-tribune.com
Marketing Manager
Anna Wlodarczyk
a.wlodarczyk@dental-tribune.com
Marketing & Sales Assistant
Lorrie Young
l.young@dental-tribune.com
C.E. Manager
Julia Wehkamp
j.wehkamp@dental-tribune.com
International C.E. Sales Manager
Christiane Ferret
c.ferret@dtstudyclub.com
Fig. 3: Appropriate implant placement requires orthodontic movement.
need for implants and/or periodontal treatment and bone augmentation. In these cases especially, efficient interdisciplinary collaboration
may result in a great benefit for the
patients.5–12
Periodontally accelerated orthodontic movement, as described by
Wilcko, appears particularly feasible
in those multidisciplinary cases for
which treatment planning requires
orthodontic movement and oral or
periodontal surgery. In these cases,
corticotomy can be combined with
wisdom tooth extraction and/or a
regenerative technique, such as
guided bone regeneration (GBR), in
order to avoid multiple surgeries.
Recently some orthodontic therapies, especially the so-called lowfriction therapies, have demonstrated clinically and radiographically
that it is possible to expand dental
arches without interfering with periodontal health, by augmenting the
alveolar bones.
Melsen et al.13 confirmed what
Do you have general comments or criticism you would
like to share? Is there a particular topic you would like
to see more articles about? Let us know by e-mailing us
at feedback@dental-tribune.com. If you would like to
make any change to your subscription (name, address
or to opt out) please send us an e-mail at database@
dental-tribune.com and be sure to include which publication you are referring to. Also, please note that subscription changes can take up to 6 weeks to process.
was previously suggested, that the
tooth will move with the bone and
not in bone, especially when light
orthodontic forces are applied.
Dehiscence and fenestration, which
are difficult to diagnose preoperatively, may represent a limitation
of this technique. Because the tooth
will move with the periodontium, in
cases in which the periodontium is
not present, we might create recession and attachment loss.14 A recent
study on modern American skulls
found that a dehiscence was present in 40.4 percentof the skulls, and
a fenestration was present in 61.6
percent of skulls.15
If this data is translated in clinical
treatment, it may mean that potentially at least 50 percent of orthodontic patients undergoing expanding
movement could be at risk of gingival recession and periodontal damage. It would be advisable, then, to
introduce routine 3-D X-rays into
g IT page 4
IT
Dental Tribune America, LLC
116 W. 23rd St., Suite #500
New York, NY 10011
Phone: (212) 244-7181, Fax: (212) 244-7185
Published by
Dental Tribune America
© 2011 Dental Tribune America.
All rights reserved.
Dental Tribune makes every effort
to report clinical information and
manufacturer’s product news accurately, but cannot assume responsibility for the validity of product
claims, or for typographical errors.
The publishers also do not assume
responsibility for product names
or claims, or statements made by
advertisers. Opinions expressed by
authors are their own and may
not reflect those of Dental Tribune
International.
Editorial Advisory Board
Dr. Sascha Jovanovic, Editor in Chief
Dr. Bernard Touati
Dr. Jack T. Krauser
Dr. Andre Saadoun
Corrections
Implant Tribune strives to maintain the utmost accuracy in its
news and clinical reports. If you
find a factual error or content that
requires clarification, please report
the details to Managing Editor
Sierra Rendon at s.rendon@dentaltribune.com.
Dr. Gary Henkel
Dr. Doug Deporter
Dr. Michael Norton
Dr. Ken Serota
Dr. Axel Zoellner
Dr. Glen Liddelow
Dr. Marius Steigmann
[3] =>
[4] =>
4
Clinical
Implant Tribune | August 2011
Fig. 5:
Provisional
restoration
in place.
f IT page 2
Fig. 4: At the time of implant placement, a corticotomy is performed to accelerate the orthodontic movement and facilitate the implant restoration. Regeneration with a first layer of autologous graft collected during site preparartion, covered with xenograft and a resorbable membrane (Endobone and
Osseoguard, BIOMET 3i), was performed simultaneously.
AD
the preoperative work-up (i.e., cone
beam).
The cone-beam examination, with
a reduced dose of radiation compared with the fan beam (CT scan)
and better definition,16 could be used
routinely in those patients with a
thin, scalloped periodontium, where
the risk of post-operative recessions
is higher. The PAOO technique has
been found not only to be predictable in solving dehiscence and fenestration above the roots,17 but also
to produce a noticeable change in
the cephalometric analysis of points
A and B.17 With the PAOO technique,
the patient needs to be seen routinely for changing the wires, as the
teeth movements are much faster
than in regular orthodontic treatment. The use of segmental corticotomy (applied only to the teeth that
have to move more than the others)
can dramatically change the relationship amongst groups of teeth.18
This has to be kept in mind
because it may require changes in
distributing the anchorage by the
orthodontist. The teeth in the area of
surgery will be moving much faster
than the other teeth.
Conclusions
When the treatment plan requires
orthodontic movement and oral or
periodontal surgery, corticotomy can
be combined with a wisdom tooth
extraction and/or a regenerative
technique, such as GBR, in order
to avoid multiple surgeries and to
optimize the final outcome for the
patient.
Another indication is for instances in which the risk of creating
root dehiscence in patients with thin
periodontium is very high even with
slow orthodontic movement and
light forces applied. Root recession
can be present even without clinical manifestation of gingival recession. An efficient multidisciplinary
approach to a complex case may
result in a faster and better treatment. The PAOO technique can be
used for faster dental movement, to
treat and prevent periodontal problems and to regenerate ridge defects,
allowing implant placement. IT
Editorial note: A list of references is
available from the publisher.
IT
Contact
Federico Brugnami, DDS
Piazza dei prati degli Strozzi 21
00195 Roma, Italy
Tel.: +39 06 39730191
Fax: +39 06 39730195
fbrugnami@gmail.com
Alfonso Caiazzo, DDS
Private practice, Salerno, Italy
[5] =>
Implant Tribune | August 2011
AO Annual Meeting
Osstell AB1
5
[6] =>
6
AO Annual Meeting
Implant Tribune | February 2011
ICOI
[7] =>
Perio
Implant Tribune | August 2011
f IT page 1
limited to the nutritional supplements, those who had scaling and
root planning and those who had
local antibiotics added to their scaling and root planning procedures. At
30 days, the pocket depth and gingival index were measured for the
three groups with those receiving
the nutritional supplements without
any further treatment showing a
significantly reduced pocket depth
compared to the two other groups.
Double-blind studies represent
the highest form of proof in evidence-based research and the conclusions must include the following:
1. The proper nutritional supplements improve the health
status of the periodontium.
2. The improvement must be
systemic in nature since no
local remedies were applied
and where they were applied
in the two other groups the
results were not as successful.
3. Given the systemic improvement in what we traditionally treat as a local problem, we
have to assume that the local
manifestation of a compromised
periodontium is at least in part
caused by systemic conditions.
4. We must consider the probability that many diseases are at least
partially exacerbated if not caused
by a lack of proper nutrition.
In addition to the two studies presented here, there are literally hundreds of other studies showing the
effect of nutritional status on health
as it relates to macular degeneration, diabetes, cancer, heart disease,
lung disease as well as the general
state of aging.2
While much of this is known,
there is little compliance among
the general population to take the
necessary blood tests to determine
one’s nutritional status. One can
know what the proper thing is to do,
but for a large segment of the population, avoiding needles will trump
the common sense of drawing blood.
And, as a result, we remain uninformed.
Today, however, technology
allows the nutritional status of
a patient to be determined noninvasively in less than 90 seconds
using a blue laser light directed at
the skin in the hand. This technology, called Raman spectroscopy, led
to the development of the biophotonic scanner that accurately measures the carotenoids in the skin.
Carotenoids have been shown to
be a measure of nutritional health
from a plethora of studies.3 Carotenoids are an accurate reflection of
a patient’s overall antioxidant status,
and antioxidants have, in turn, been
shown to be the protectors of our
organs on both the cellular and DNA
level.
Basically, our degenerative aging
process is thought to result from an
accumulation of damage done to
our DNA and cells by the continuous attacks of free radicals (reactive
oxygen species). They are called
Fig. 1: Biophotonic scanner. (Photos/
Provided by Dr. Barry L. Musikant)
free radicals because they are missing an election in their outer shell
and will attack any other atom or
molecule to get one, damaging (oxidizing) it in the process. Antioxidants, as the name suggests, pre-
vents this oxidation by contributing
electrons to these free radicals, neutralizing their destructive behavior
in the process. Now, life is a balance.
We do produce many of our own
antioxidants, but not all. Some must
come from exogenous sources such
as fruits and vegetables.
Many of these antioxidants come
from the various highly colored
fruits we eat, such as carrots, red
and yellow peppers, and the greater
their concentration in our blood, the
more protection they offer both as
antioxidants in their own right, but
also as protectors of the endogenous
antioxidants we produce ourselves.
To sum up, at this point we have
strong correlation between one’s
nutritional status and the level of
carotenoids in our skin as measured
by the biophotonic scanner. We
7
also now have a tool that we can
use to determine whether or not
the supplements we may be taking
are effective. How many of us have
taken one nutritional supplement
after another without a clue to their
effectiveness and than we just switch
to another supplement that garners
attention in the news or simply drop
what we had been taking?
I will tell you from personal experience that one can be quite cavalier
about one’s nutritional status until
you take the scanner test and get a
low score. Knowing the correlation
between low antioxidant levels and
the increased propensity for degenerative diseases to express themselves, it is logical that most of us
would want to change that status as
g IT page 9
AD
xx
[8] =>
8
News
Implant Tribune | February 2011
gIDE
[9] =>
Clinical
Implant Tribune | August 2011
f IT page 7
rapidly as possible, especially after
we have passed the stage where
we still think we are immortal. It
is unlikely that most of us have the
discipline to instantaneously make
a major change in diet and life
style. More likely to produce the
sought-after results is the use of supplements as recommended by the
nutritional company that developed
the scanner to aid us in attaining
a better nutritional status, one that
can be measured periodically by the
same biophotonic scanner that told
us of our deficiencies.
That is exactly the route I have
taken, and during the past three
months, my nutritional score has
tripled. I am still not where I want
to be, but I am on a road that
shows continuous progress. Of equal
importance, the biophotonic scanner is a motivator for maintaining
good nutritional status. I have also
noticed that over time, at least with
me, it is a tool that produces behavioral modifications. I find myself eating more fruit and vegetables, less
fried food and consuming far less
sugar. So far, each time I have been
scanned, my scores have gone up.
We all wear several hats in the
course of our lives. One hat I wear
in addition to being an endodontist
is a producer of innovative dental
products, particularly in the field
of endodontics. However, I cannot
help but see the advantages to any
dental practice that would incorporate the biophotonic scanner as
an initial means of determining the
nutritional status of their patients.
If you see a patient who displays
periodontal disease4 and that patient
correlates with a low nutritional
score, both you and the patient will
gain from a regimen of supplements
that research has clearly shown to
IT
About the author
Dr. Barry Lee Musikant is a
member of the American Dental
Association, American Association
of Endodontists, Academy of General Dentistry, The Dental Society
of N.Y., First District Dental Society, Academy of Oral Medicine,
Alpha Omega Dental Fraternity
and the American Society of Dental Aesthetics. He is also a fellow of
the American College of Dentistry
(FACD). As a partner in the largest
endodontic practice in Manhattan, Musikant’s 35-plus years of
practice experience have established him as one of the top
authorities in endodontics.
Fig. 2: Scores from the biophotonic scanner. An optimal reading begins at
40,000.
improve these conditions even without local therapy being initiated.
As an added motivator, research
has clearly shown that damage to the
same gene can adversely effect one’s
periodontal state as well as one’s
cardiac health. With the knowledge
that free radicals damage the genes
comprising our DNA, we may be
doing much more for the patient
than we realize. We are certainly
doing no harm.
Data has shown that our patients
are far more likely to visit us than
a physician. It has also been stated
that more than 90 percent of the dis-
9
eases that affect us display oral signs
and symptoms.5-7 We can take advantage of the technological advances
that now allow us to determine our
patients’ level of antioxidants to
make recommendations to them for
an improvement of their nutritional
status and to monitor them for the
improvements that are sure to come.
There is so much more to this
story, but if this short article stirs
some interest in you, please contact
Victoria Reina at vreina@edsdental.
com for more information and, if
so desired, a biophotonic scan for
yourself. That’s where it started for
me, and I want to extend these benefits to as many people as possible.
I hope every dentist who reads this
article sees the great possibilities for
doing good, both for your patients
and yourself. IT
AD
[10] =>
10
Events
Implant Tribune | August 2011
Upcoming AAID annual meeting:
‘Stack the Deck in Your Favor’
The theme of the AAID’s
60th annual meeting, which
takes place in October in
Las Vegas, is ‘Realities of
Implant Dentistry: Stacking
the Deck in Your Favor.’
(Photo/www.sxc.hu)
AD
Main podium aims
to provide clinicians
with practice advice
A world-class faculty including
Sascha A. Jovanovic, Carl E. Misch,
Craig M. Misch, Paul Petrungaro,
Michael A. Pikos and others will
headline the programs at the American Academy of Implant Dentistry
(AAID) Annual Meeting.
More than 1,000 implant clinicians
are expected to attend the event in
Las Vegas from Oct. 19–22.
Here is just a sample of the Main
Podium presentations:
• “Finding the Right Patient — It
Takes More than an Ad”
• “The First Visit for the Patient
— Your Only Chance at the First
Impression”
• “Case Planning to Prevent
Implant Complications: Methods to
Reduce”
• “Biomechanical Factors; Key
Implant Positions; Implant Number;
and Implant Size”
• “Comprehensive Implant Dentistry Using 3-D Imaging: Reduce
Complications, Increase Confidence,
Achieve Excellence”
• “Treatment Planning-Implants
Versus Root Canal Therapy: Read,
Analyze, and then Decide”
• “The Case Acceptance Appointment — What to Do Starting Next
Week”
• “Extract and Graft; Implant
Later”
• “Implants for Immediate Function — Fact or Fiction”
• “Risk Assessment in the Esthetic
Zone”
• “Soft-Tissue Esthetics and Health
with Dental Implants: 10 Key Criteria
for Success”
• “Regenerative and Esthetic Techniques in Implant Surgery: Clinical Applications with Recombinant
Growth Factors”
• “Enhancing Outcomes with
Block Bone Grafts”
• “Avoiding and Managing Esthetic
Implant Complications”
Register by Sept. 19 to save $100
on the full registration fee for dentists
for the AAID’s 60th annual meeting.
The theme is “Realities of Implant
Dentistry: Stacking the Deck in Your
Favor.”
Make your hotel reservations
online at the special AAID hotel rate
at Caesars’ Palace (or call (866) 2275944 or (702) 731-7222). Mention
the AAID’s Group Code (SCAAI1) for
special group rates.
More information including
online registration, abstracts, learning objectives for the Main Podium
programs, the schedule and speaker
bios are available on AAID’s website
at www.aaid.com. IT
[11] =>
Implant Tribune | February 2011
Astra Tech
Clinical 11
[12] =>
12
Education
Implant Tribune | August 2011
[13] =>
Implant Tribune | February 2011
Events 13
[14] =>
14
Events
Implant Tribune | August 2011
‘Ride the Wave to Success in Dentistry’
at the Yankee Dental Congress 2012
Do you have plans for Jan. 25–29,
2012? Well, you will after reading
what Yankee Dental Congress 2012
has to offer this January at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. With more than 300 educational
courses and more than 450 exhibitors, all of your needs for dental education will be met as you “Ride the
Wave to Success in Dentistry.”
Yankee will be sure to make a
splash with these highlights:
• Scottsdale of the East: Leading
clinicians from the renowned Scottsdale Center for Dentistry will be presenting programs in esthetic, restorative and CAD/CAM dentistry across
two full days.
• Madow Brothers: Rock-and-roll
dentists David and Richard Madow
will be giving their high-powered Las
Vegas-style presentation for the first
time at Yankee.
• Disney Institute: Chris Caracci,
a leading health-care consultant
from the Disney Institute, will be
presenting practice management
and real customer service, the Disney way.
Attendees explore the exhibit hall at the 2011 Yankee Dental Congress.
(Photo/Kristine Colker, Dental Tribune)
• Opening keynote speaker: New
this year, you will be inspired by
the words of Dick Hoyt, who has
competed in road races worldwide
with his wheelchair-bound son Rick,
including 30 Boston Marathons.
Join us for a presentation Thursday
morning followed by breakfast on
the show floor. Admission to this
event is free to all.
• Face transplant pioneer: Dr.
Daniel Alam, chief of facial esthetics and reconstructive surgery at the
renowned Cleveland Clinic, will present a behind–the-scenes look and
follow-up of the first-ever successful
face transplantation performed in the
United States.
• Team development day: A new
twist to this popular program will
feature working through a day of
not-so-typical patients, highlighting
varied medical histories, emergency
situations and unique clinical challenges, all with the guidance and
help of experts in each field.
Back by popular demand:
• Live dentistry: See all-new, cutting-edge procedures performed on
live patients.
• Expanded high-tech playground:
Touch and try all the new gadgets at
your pace without any sales pressure.
• Free lunch on the exhibit hall
floor: Now on Saturday, Jan. 28. Have
a bite to eat while talking shop with
450-plus exhibitors.
Registration and housing will open
on Sept. 21. Be sure to register early;
more than 40 percent of the educational courses sold out last year. If
you register four or more dental professionals from your office, the fifth
person will go for free (some restrictions apply).
Visit www.yankeedental.com for
details. IT
AD
IT
[15] =>
[16] =>
00
Folio
Implant Tribune | September 2009
DTSC
[17] =>
Industry 17
Implant Tribune | August 2011
Win a trip to New York City and join
us for the Dental Tribune Awards
Dental Tribune is the largest dental
newspaper worldwide, published in
more than 25 languages with a readership of 650,000-plus dentists, and it
is one of the best known brands in the
global dental community. In 2011, we
will launch the Global Dental Tribune
Awards to celebrate excellence in
dentistry.
This is a fantastic opportunity for
practices and companies to show just
how remarkable they are and compete against others in their own areas
on friendly terms.
The winners will receive a free
economy flight to New York City to
join us at the award ceremony, which
will be held at the Greater New York
Dental Meeting on Nov. 28 in the special events hall.
All Dental Tribune readers worldwide are cordially invited to submit their applications online without
registration fees by Oct. 21 for the
following award categories: Clinical
Research of the Year; Dentistry in a
Crisis Zone; Premier New Dentist;
Innovation in Dentistry; Dental Mar-
Dental
Tribune
Award
winners
will receive a
flight to New
York City to
attend the
award
ceremony
at the GNYDM
(Photo/DTI
International).
keting Campaign of the Year; Premier
Dental Educator; Lifetime Achievement; Implant Practice of the Year;
Endodontic Practice of the Year; Cosmetic Practice of the Year; Orthodontic Practice of the Year; Pediatric Practice of the Year; Best Office Design;
Outstanding Individual of the Year;
and Outstanding Dental Website
Simply choose the categories you
wish to enter and
produce an entry to impress. Please
submit one PDF document online,
consisting of 500-1,000 words as well
as up to six images in JPG format with
captions. Explain why your practice
or the individual/team deserves to
win. You can nominate yourself, a
team or an individual. The final deadline for all entries is Oct. 21.
Applications will be judged by a
jury of renowned opinion leaders
from all parts of the world, including
Dr. Robert Edwab, executive director of the Greater New York Dental
Meeting; Dr. Lorin Berland, fellow
of AACD; Dr. Denis Forest, directeur
des Journées dentaires internationales du Québec, Canada; Dr. Sergio
Cacciacane, director Escuela Superior de Impantologia, Argentina; Dr.
Adolfo Rodríguez, president Dominican Dental Association, Dominican
Republic; Dr. Stefan Holst, clinical
associate professor at the FriedrichAlexander-University, Germany; Prof.
Dr. Norbert Gutknecht, president of
the World Federation of Laser Dentistry, Germany; Dr. Sushil Koirala,
president of the South Asian Academy of Aesthetic Dentistry (SAAAD),
Nepal; and Dr. So-Ran Kwon, president of the Korean Bleaching Society,
Korea.
There is no registration fee. Submit your application online at www.
dental-tribune.com/awards.
Good luck! IT
AD
[18] =>
18
Industry
Implant Tribune | August 2011
Zimmer Dental partners with Zfx
for digital dentistry solutions
Zimmer Dental, a leading provider of dental oral rehabilitation products and a subsidiary of Zimmer
Holdings, is pleased to announce a
unique partnership with Zfx GmbH
that will expand the latter’s global
presence in the digital dentistry
arena and allow Zimmer Dental
to enter the CAD/CAM crown and
bridge market, offering restorations
on natural teeth as well as implants.
Under the newly signed agreement, Zimmer Dental will distribute Zfx open platform laboratory
scanners, CAD software and custom
milled components. For streamlined operation and simplicity,
each component of the Zfx system
is linked together by an Internet
portal that integrates the digitized
patient data and facilitates the flow
of information from clinician to lab
to a Zfx milling center. The end
goal: enhanced efficiency between
the clinician and lab, and satisfied
patients with individualized esthetic
restorations on their implants and
natural teeth.
Zimmer Dental customers in
Europe will utilize one of the existAD
(Photo/Provided
by Zimmer
Dental)
ing Zfx milling centers. In the United States, Zimmer will utilize Zfx’s
expertise to expand upon its upand-running Carlsbad, Calif., milling center to produce crown and
bridge components, bars, titanium
abutments and Zirconia abutments.
“Zimmer Dental continues to
demonstrate its strong commitment to improving patients’ lives
through innovative products and
technologies,” said Harold C. Flynn,
Jr., Zimmer Dental president. “We
are pleased to partner with Zfx,
combining our global presence and
renowned quality with their technological expertise and know-how,
to provide our clinicians and labs
with a state-of-the-art and scalable
digital solution.”
For decades, Zimmer Dental has
gained the trust of thousands of clinicians worldwide who count on its
comprehensive line of products to
deliver successful patient outcomes.
For more information regarding this
digital solution, contact a Zimmer
dental sales consultant or customer
service at (800) 854-7019, or visit
www.zimmerdental.com. IT
OCO Biomedical
may now sell
Class II implants
in Canada
OCO Biomedical, one of the
United States’ most innovative
manufacturers of dental implants
and attachment systems, recently
received approval from Health
Canada for the sale of Class II dental implants. OCO Biomedical now
is permitted to market and distribute dental implants as well as the
placement instrumentation (Class
III devices) throughout Canada.
“We are proud and excited to
offer our unique Dual Stabilization® dental implants to the Canadian market. Canadian dentists
will now have the option to easily
place and restore dental implants
and selectively load their cases,”
said Dr. David D’Alise, president
and founder of OCO Biomedical.
OCO Biomedical develops,
markets and distributes highquality conventional and smaller
diameter dental implants, surgical instrumentation and attachment systems. For more information on OCO Biomedical, visit
www.ocobiomedical.com.
[19] =>
Industry News 19
Implant Tribune | February 2011
???
[20] =>
20
Products
Implant Tribune | August 2011
MIS offers up BondBone
for successful bone grafting
BondBone from MIS Implants
Technologies offers a self-reinforced
bone-augmentation product.
(Photo/Provided by MIS)
AD
As implant dentistry becomes a
standard procedure for dental rehabilitation, bone grafting following
tooth extraction is necessary to help
preserve bone volume for later dental implant placement. Suboptimal
bone compromises implant success
because of exposed implant threads
and poor stability. A well-preserved
socket helps to assure success.
MIS Implants Technologies offers
an innovative, self-reinforced boneaugmentation product, made from
pure biphasic calcium sulfate, developed to optimize socket preservation
as well as other bone-grafting procedures. It is the only pure calcium
sulfate product able to set completely
in the presence of blood and saliva.
BondBone® is a biocompatible
biphasic calcium sulfate in granulated powder form. Because of its
unique engineering, the material
combines the best qualities and
advantages of hemihydrate and dihydrate phases of calcium sulfate into
one product that is easy to use with
predictable results.
It is an osteoconductive, self-reinforced material with a resorption
rate equivalent to bone growth.
Once mixed in its “driver” delivery
system, the material is cementable
and moldable with the procedure
time from the beginning of mix to
completion being accomplished in
two to five minutes. Its quick setting
ability without the need for accelerators (minimizing detrimental exothermic reactions), and its puttylike mix for good bone-to-product
contact, enables the grafted area to
fill with vital bone in three to four
months.
In small defects less than 10 mm
with at least three-wall bony support,
BondBone can be used on its own.
In larger defects or when longer
resorption time is preferred, BondBone can be mixed with other granular bone augmentation products,
creating a composite graft material.
BondBone is a safe, synthetic bone
graft material. Its optimal properties
facilitate the bone-regeneration process that is necessary for the success
of future implant restorations. For
more information, please visit www.
misimplants.com or call (866) 7971333. IT
PhotoMed 270EX
wireless flash and
R2 bracket system
(Photo/Provided by PhotoMed)
PhotoMed’s new R2 Dual Point
Flash Bracket is designed to give
you maximum flexibility in flash
positioning. Bring the flash heads in
toward the lens for posterior views
and mirror shots.
Spread the flash heads out to the
side for anterior esthetic images and
natural-looking smile shots. Each
flash head can be repositioned with
one hand.
Canon’s new 270EX II flashes
are the smallest models available for
Canon that have the ability to be
controlled wirelessly. Newer Canon
cameras have built-in wireless flash
transmitters that can control the
270EX II flashes for a perfect exposure every time.
Canon also makes compact flash
transmitters for older cameras.
For more information, visit www.
photomed.net or call (800) 998-7765.
[21] =>
Implant Tribune | February 2011
Industry News 21
[22] =>
22
Industry News
Implant Tribune | February 2011
Academy of Osseointegration
[23] =>
Implant Tribune | August 2011
Products 23
i-CAT Precise was designed to help
dentists provide better care in treatment planning for placing and restoring
implants, performing guided surgery,
extractions and other surgical procedures.
This dynamic system has all the benefits of three-dimensional radiography
that so many dentists have come to
expect from i-CAT® technology, plus it
delivers the most comprehensive treatment tools for implant therapy, the fastest radiographic workflow and complete
clinical control over image size and
dose, according to Imaging Sciences.
For implant placement, i-CAT Precise
comes with the exclusive, integrated
Tx Studio™ software that affords total
control of all aspects of treatment —
implant, abutment and restoration. This
comprehensive treatment tool allows
the clinician to guide each case efficiently, from plan to completion, with
enhanced surgical predictability. Plus,
the visuals of the software create patient
engagement that may lead to a greater
understanding of their condition and of
the treatment plan.
Keeping the office moving quickly
while offering a high level care, the scan
is captured, reconstructed and ready
for planning in less than 30 seconds.
Even complex treatment plans can be
completed in a few minutes with the
included Tx Studio software and immediately discussed either chairside or in
consultation rooms.
Additionally, i-CAT-powered scanners, including i-CAT Precise, are the
only systems capable of producing CBCT
radiographic images and panoramic
scans in 4.8 seconds, perfect for following the progress of treatment.
Utilizing a host of proprietary tools
including i-Collimator™, a variety of dose
settings and i-PAN™’s built-in panoramic
function — all hallmarks of the awardwinning i-CAT technology — i-CAT
Precise allows for responsible imaging.
Flexible control over image size and
low-dose scanning gives control to tailor
3-D and 2-D scans to the need of each
individual patient. Capture a single arch
to full dentition plus the TMJ complex
with 3-D scans of 8 cm or 14 cm diameters and heights ranging from 8 cm to 2
cm and everything in between.
With i-CAT Precise, clinicians can
confidently communicate to patients that
they are getting a dose that is minimized
for their individual treatment.
Learn more at www.i-cat.com. IT
(Photo/Provided by i-CAT)
The new i-CAT Precise
AD
[24] =>
Imaging Sciences
)
[page_count] => 24
[pdf_ping_data] => Array
(
[page_count] => 24
[format] => PDF
[width] => 765
[height] => 1080
[colorspace] => COLORSPACE_UNDEFINED
)
[linked_companies] => Array
(
[ids] => Array
(
)
)
[cover_url] =>
[cover_three] =>
[cover] =>
[toc] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[title] => AAOMS in Philly
[page] => 01
)
[1] => Array
(
[title] => Surgically accelerated orthodontics in implant treatment
[page] => 01
)
[2] => Array
(
[title] => Validating the oral-systemic health connection
[page] => 01
)
[3] => Array
(
[title] => Upcoming AAID annual meeting: ‘Stack the Deck in Your Favor’
[page] => 10
)
[4] => Array
(
[title] => ‘Ride the Wave to Success in Dentistry’ at the Yankee Dental Congress 2012
[page] => 14
)
[5] => Array
(
[title] => Win a trip to New York City and join us for the Dental Tribune Awards
[page] => 17
)
[6] => Array
(
[title] => Industry
[page] => 18
)
[7] => Array
(
[title] => Products
[page] => 20
)
)
[toc_html] =>
[toc_titles] => AAOMS in Philly
/ Surgically accelerated orthodontics in implant treatment
/ Validating the oral-systemic health connection
/ Upcoming AAID annual meeting: ‘Stack the Deck in Your Favor’
/ ‘Ride the Wave to Success in Dentistry’ at the Yankee Dental Congress 2012
/ Win a trip to New York City and join us for the Dental Tribune Awards
/ Industry
/ Products
[cached] => true
)