How CAD/CAM Can Help Restore Your Smile
September 1, 2020

The power of computers nowadays can be used to restoring the smiles of many people. We use Computer-Assisted-Design (CAD) & Computer-Assisted-Manufacturing (CAM) to create custom dental restorations. This expertise makes bridges, crowns, coatings, inlays, dentures perfectly and faster than before. In the CAD technology, we produce a digital imprint of the teeth with a scanner.

The dentist uses expert software to design your restoration. In the CAM process, the machine uses digital design to form a real-life version out of a mass of porcelain or combined resin.

This refined restoration is then bleached to match your present teeth. Due to its effectiveness, CAD/CAM has abridged the time for some processes from weeks to a day.

What is CAD/CAM?

CAD/CAM is an abbreviation that stands for computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing. They support to develop different design restorations that are common among patients.

This technology has a wide range of restorations. They include inlays, veneers, fixed bridges, dental implants, removable or fixed dentures, orthodontic appliances, crowns, bridges, and onlays. Our Morristown Dentist unit is also linked to the CAD/CAM software. This enables our surgeon to plan complex implant surgery and also provide surgical guides.

We use this technology to provide patients with durable, esthetic, well-fitted single, and multiple tooth restorations in a more efficient manner. The technology has the accuracy of fitting in extensive implant bridgework. Patients get to see the end outcome from the treatments in reduced time.

The Procedure for CAD/CAM Dentistry?

This technology of dental restoration is typically formed from solid blocks of ceramic or composite resin materials. The initial phase of using CAD/CAM technology is tooth preparation. Then, a digital imprint is taken, which sends the ready, precise sizes of the teeth into a computer.

The computer software creates a computer-generated restoration spare parts of the missing areas of the teeth/tooth. The software then directs the simulated restoration information to the milling machine. Here, the spare part is imprinted out of a concrete block of porcelain or merged resin. The refurbishment is accustomed to the patient’s mouth and paved or merged in place.

With CAD/CAM technology, custom three-dimensional pictures of your prepared tooth or teeth are shaped by numerically scanning your faulty parts. This permits us to repair any fault preceding the commencement of the procedure. There are a wide variety of CAD/CAM products that are used by different clinics.

The phases involved in a CAD/CAM technology in summary are:

  • Anesthesia
  • Tooth preparation
  • Intraoral scanning
  • Restoration design
  • Milling
  • Sintering and polishing
  • Cementation

Importance of CAD/CAM Dentistry

Studies suggest that today’s CAD/CAM restorations are stronger than those milled from earlier materials. They also are less likely to fracture.

CAD/CAM has numerous benefits to restorative dentistry, ranging from improved accuracy to shorter waiting periods for your dental appliances. There is no need for outsourcing products like crowns or restorative options. The procedure can be done in one office visit, without the need for a temporary restoration.

It also eliminates several outsourcing costs, although you may have to pay for the extra time the dentist spends at your chairside.

Caring for your new dental restorations can be done using the same oral hygiene routine, for example, daily cleaning using fluoride toothpaste.

Others include:

  • It increases the productivity of the designer-better product design
  • Greater flexibility
  • Greater manufacturing control
  • Reduced costs
  • Improved communication
  • Supported integration
  • Increased utilization
  • Faster development and better products

When to Choose CAD/CAM Dentistry

Some teeth cannot be treated using this CAD/CAM restoration technology. If this restoration is an appropriate treatment for your teeth, you can contact your family dentist. Based on the kind of restoration that is required, your dentist may use conventional laboratory fabrication methods that are more accurate and best of fit.

Patients should discuss these situations and needs with the dentist, who makes the final treatment decision grounded on detailed analysis.

Are You a Good Candidate for CAM/CAD Treatment?

Our dentist at Dental Care of Morristown will tell you if you’re the right candidate for the CAD/CAM technology. If your consultant acclaims a CAD/CAM dental procedure, you will be asked for full information on the costs and importance you can anticipate.

Continuously seek the guidance of your dentist or other experienced healthcare providers with questions concerning a medical illness or treatment. To find out if the treatment would be the best method for you, be sure to visit us for smile restorations in Morristown, NJ.

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