Video Details
|
睡眠時無呼吸症候群の歯科的診断と治療- Part 2
Description:
In this clinical video demonstration in private practice, Dr. Maurice Salama takes you through his routine for evaluating and testing patients who present with a airway related sleep disorder. In this 2nd section, the diagnostic methodology is continued along with a thorough description of the fabrication, utilization and verification of the efficacy of appliance therapy to overcome the airway obstruction often found in patients exhibiting sleep apnea.
Date Added:
6/20/2010
Author(s):
Maurice Salama, DMD
Dr. Maurice A. Salama completed his undergraduate studies at the State University
of New York at Binghamton in 1985, where he received his BS in Biology. Dr. Salama
r...
[read more]
|

|
Online Videos / Restorative / Crowns and Bridges / Dental Diagnosis & Treatment for Obstructive Sleep Apnea - Part 2
Questions & Comments
|
Kirk Rathburn - (12/30/2017 9:41 AM)
What if the patient can't tolerate the MAD you have constructed? His financial expenditure has been significant and the device will end up in a vanity drawer. I might suggest a proof in concept approach utilizing a temporary device that the patient actually uses at home and an actual titration process is carried out. Great Lakes Orthodontics offers an inexpensive temporary device called a" My Tap" that allows for titration of VDO and mandibular advancement. Once the patient reports they are comfortable with the device and the symptoms have improved a final MAD can be fabricated, thus carrying thru with the proof in concept approach.
With much admiration, Kirk R. Rathburn DDS
|
Barbara Lewis-heywood - (10/15/2013 2:30 PM)
How can I do this in my dental office?
|
Barbara Lewis-heywood - (10/15/2013 2:29 PM)
Great
|
Related Videos |
|
|
|
Adjusting RPD Clasps
Dr. Wendy AuClair gives a tip on adjusting RPD clasps with a boomerang-shaped clasp adjuster.
Presented By:: |
Wendy AuClair-Clark, DDS, MS |
Presentation Style: |
Video |
Community Rating: |
|
|
Watch Now>>
|
|
|
|
|
|
Periodontal-Prosthesis in Modern Dentistry – Part 2 of 2
Clinicians must be aware of patient expectations when planning dental treatment. When full mouth reconstruction is planned, it is very important to satisfy such expectations in order to provide successful treatment. Patients are often concerned about the cost and duration of treatment, and the pain, esthetics, comfort, and function after treatment. However, we cannot assure longevity unless the treatment has a scientific basis.
Presented By:: |
Yoshihiro Kida, DDS, PhD |
Presentation Style: |
Video |
Community Rating: |
|
|
Watch Now>>
|
|
|
|
Related Courses |
|
|
Guided Preparations and the Future of Minimally Invasive Dentistry
An introduction to describe the use of digitally designed, 3D-printed guides to prepare teeth. This state of the arts technology allows dentists to efficiently prepare teeth and deliver the final restoration in one visit.
The objective of this presentation is to provide the audience an introduction to with the advancement of 3D-printing in dentistry and it’s use as it pertains to restorative options. With computer aided procedures we can now digitally design and prepare 3D-printed guides to precisely prepare teeth and deliver the final restoration without the need for a temporary.
Presented By:: |
Cyrus Tahmasebi, DDS |
Presentation Style: |
Online Self-Study Course |
CE Hours: |
1 CEU (Continuing Education Credit) |
|
Watch Now>>
|
|
|
|
|
The Surgical-Restorative Digital Work Flow In Comprehensive Therapy
Traditional methods of treating our patients are being been replaced by digital processes, impacting our daily life. The intake of various technologies such as CBCT imaging, scanning, digital restorative design and CAD/CAM production have contributed to this movement. In the same time, restorative materials have also been developed and studied that have improved strength and esthetic qualities. All these capabilities create opportunities for better restorative outcome.
This presentation will highlight a practice-based model centered on digitally enhanced treatment for efficient and predictable esthetic restorative outcomes.
Presented By:: |
Karim Dada, DDS, MS;Leon Pariente, DDS |
Presentation Style: |
Online Self-Study Course |
CE Hours: |
1 CEU (Continuing Education Unit) |
|
Watch Now>>
|
|
|
|
|
The Changing Paradigm of Digital Implant Dentistry: Today’s Technology and Tomorrow’s Concepts - Part 1 of 2
Digital technology has revolutionized implant dentistry but not without frustration. Recent advances with hardware, software, and materials now present integrated solutions for the implant team through planning, placement, and restoration. Single implant treatment will be presented for every-day practice, as well as more advanced partial and fully-edentulous techniques. The most efficient and precise workflows through Keystone and its industry partners will give you concrete digital solutions ready for implementation in your practice. At the conclusion of the lecture the speaker will define some different “team structures” for how the surgeon, dentist, and lab could invest in technology and work together.
Presented By:: |
Peter Barndt, DDS, MDSc, FACP |
Presentation Style: |
Online Self-Study Course |
CE Hours: |
1 CEU (Continuing Education Unit) |
|
Watch Now>>
|
|
|
|
Related Articles |
|
|
A Biometric Approach to Predictable Treatment of Clinical Crown Discrepancies
Dental professionals have long been guided by mathematical principles when interpreting aesthetic and tooth proportions for their patients. While many acknowledge that such principles are merely launch points for a smile design or reconstructive procedure, their existence appears to indicate practitioners’ desire for predictable, objective, and reproducible means of achieving success in aesthetic dentistry. This article introduces innovative aesthetic measurement gauges as a means of objectively quantifying tooth size discrepancies and enabling the clinician to perform aesthetic restorative dentistry with success and predictability.
|
|
|
|
A Biometric Approach To Aesthetic Crown Lengthening: Part 1 - Midfacial Considerations
Although human dental anatomy is taught in university curricula, clinicians often witness restorations that are not proportional to one another. Dental restorations should also be proportional to periodontal supporting tissues as an essential aspect of dental anatomy. Measurements can be performed directly on a patient’s teeth with aesthetic gauges used to confirm the correct position of the supporting osseous topography. This article demonstrates a technique using these gauges to objectively determine the correct position of the underlying hard tissues and render predictable, aesthetic treatment.
Author(s): |
Stephen J. Chu, DMD, MSD, CDT;Mark N. Hochman, DDS |
|
View Article>>
|
|
|
|
|
CAD/CAM Solutions for Minimally Invasive All-Ceramic Rehabilitation of Extended Erosive Lesions
Dental erosion is a global health problem that can lead to significant functional and esthetic impairments of the affected patients. Treatment of sever cases with augmented loss of the vertical dimension of occlusion (VDO) represents a challenge for both the dental team and the patient. CAD/CAM technology was used in the presented case to analyze the inter-occlusal space. The case report documents a practical, digital approach and discusses the advantages related to treatment time, ease of treatment, and predictability.
Author(s): |
Petra C. Guess Gierthmuehlen, DDS; Enrico Steger, MDT |
|
View Article>>
|
|
|
|
|