Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
whitertthSpectatoryou guys are in of course……Lets get a final count by next week ..of course I’ll add some extra seats just in case…I have a friend meeting me in New Orleans wednesday, so he will join us as well…It will be fun….
Glenn van AsSpectatorYes, it sure has come a LONG way from those early days in Sept 2002!!
Its been a great ride in learning what can and cant be done with the lasers hasnt it.
Glenn
COngrats Ron on developing such a fine site. Its a testament that this is a brand free educational , university type site.
Kudos to those that lurk and those that post for everyone to learn, and most to Ron for making it all happen.
Glenn
Glenn van AsSpectatorWhat worries me is guys like Kimmel who is used to eating with his hands in hooters…..I can see him showing up in that white tight tshirt, and shocking orange shorts he likes to parade around in new orleans with beads all over…….sheesh , I wont need a scope to see that ………….
Hope that they dont have a dress code there at that fancy smancy restaraunt!!
Grin
glenn
Glenn van AsSpectatorWhat worries me is guys like Kimmel who is used to eating with his hands in hooters…..I can see him showing up in that white tight tshirt, and shocking orange shorts he likes to parade around in new orleans with beads all over…….sheesh , I wont need a scope to see that ………….
Hope that they dont have a dress code there at that fancy smancy restaraunt!!
Grin
glenn
dkimmelSpectatorDress code?
You mean this place won’t have paper towel roles on the table?
??
dkimmelSpectatorDress code?
You mean this place won’t have paper towel roles on the table?
??
Dan MelkerSpectatorThe patient must have freaked out over the beautiful provisionals!
Great documentation.
Danny(Edited by Dan Melker at 10:45 am on Mar. 4, 2005)
drnewittSpectatorThanks Danny
I was thinking of you when I first sat down with this case. Made sure I was well prepared for the open flap osseous. That’s one area I would really like to improve my skill level.
Interestingly this patient came back for a follow up, Custom shade session with my lab tech, and told us that the only person who had noticed that there was a change was her roommate. And get this, her roommate said she thought her teeth were much cuter before tx! Glad the room mate it not a patient!
Lee AllenSpectatorRon,
I remembered the lessons from this post of Sept 2002 about using the laser to assist with broken tooth extractions.
It was a lifesaver for us (me and the patient) since conventional techniques would have been difficult. She is 91, early Alzheimers, gaggle of pills including anticoagulants, chronic abscess only draining thru the canal (and associated pain), heavy tissue overgrowth on the lingual and proximals.
I used the new-for-me Z-6 tip, 9 mm long, at a setting of 3.5W and 20W/50A for troughing the bone wide enough to get an elevator on it.
I did notice that I had to trough past the line angles to make the elevation of the root easier.
Erbium is not the best in coagulation, however I used no water and .75W on the internal aspect of the socket to “boil up” a clot reminiscent of the clots shown by Bob Gregg using the FR Pulsed Nd:YAG. The attempt was not to produce a large clot, but to treat the source of the bleeding along the walls of the socket starting at the apex.
Thanks for posting back in 2002 with pictures, Ron. It was “timely” for me.
Patients daughter reported that only Tylenol was taken post-op and that the bleeding was minimal, stopping almost immediately.
Glenn van AsSpectatorWay to go Lee……its neat to revisit old posts now and see how true to life they have become for our own practices.
I have learned so much from you and others here and its great to know that little tips that people post here help others in their practice.That is what this forum is all about.
Glenn
dkimmelSpectatorWhy is it that you can use an ER laser near a metal matrix and nothing happens? However, if you come anywhere close to an alloy ( always happens with a new tip) you get that spark and a factured tip!!!!
Is this spark a so called plasma spark? Then we have a shock wave generation which causes a splintering of the tip?
Why with an Alloy and not other metal like the matrix?
What is different about the interaction of the light with the alloy vs the matrix? Does the release of free Hg have a role in this rxn?Anyone have any ideas??
Glenn van AsSpectatorWhat laser fractures the tip…….not the Delight.
I thnk that the difference is the other materials in the alloy besides the metal component but I bet Graeme Milicich would have an answer.
Glenn
dkimmelSpectatorThe Delight tip just get a small chip. With the waterlase it can be a full chunk. Picture time I guess. I’ll run down to the office just for you Glenn and take some pictures. Susan will be a bit upset as she has some yard work for me to do today. Dentistry comes first!
dkimmelSpectatorEr tip vs alloy: Alloy wins!!
Just as a heads up I never try to have contact with a alloy. Plays heck on the tips, trunk fiber and Hg vapor is not a great idea.
There is also a difference in material the tips are made of the Biolase tips are Shapphire and the Delight tip shown is Quartz. The broken Biolase tip goes in a box and the Delight tip gets polished and reused.
drnewittSpectatorWell, things are shaping up nicely. Had a meeting with Dr. Theodore Maiman the other day and he is very excited about the event and apparently has some great, juicy, laser stories to tell.
We now have a solid line up of speakers for the day including:
David Kimmel
Bob Gregg
Scott Parker
Ray Becker
Glenn van Asat only 趁 canadian this is a great reason to get up to Vancouver and enjoy our city, and see some excellent speakers to boot. It would be great to see some of the forum group up here.
Cheers
Paul -
AuthorPosts