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Chairside®<br />

A Publication of <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories • Volume 8, Issue 1<br />

Photo Essay<br />

Another Use for Anterior<br />

BruxZir ® Restorations<br />

Page 22<br />

Small-Diameter Implants:<br />

Poor to Excellent Function in<br />

One Day!<br />

Dr. Ara Nazarian<br />

Page 14<br />

Embezzlement and the<br />

<strong>Dental</strong> Practice<br />

An Interview with<br />

Prosperident CEO David Harris<br />

Page 44<br />

The Viability of Prosthetic<br />

Tooth Repositioning<br />

Dr. Robert Lowe<br />

Page 55<br />

Dr. Michael DiTolla’s<br />

Clinical Tips<br />

Page 9<br />

COVER PHOTO<br />

Jennifer Folbigg, Customer Service Representative<br />

<strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories, Newport Beach, Calif.


Contents<br />

9 Dr. DiTolla’s Clinical Tips<br />

Showcased in this issue are a cloud-based platform I<br />

recently demoed from Smile Reminder that offers an<br />

impressive suite of personalized patient communication<br />

tools for growing your patient base, and an invaluable<br />

oral hygiene product from <strong>Dental</strong> Herb Company to<br />

aid in your practice’s fight against periodontal disease.<br />

Also featured are two innovative products designed<br />

to make your dentistry easier and more efficient: a<br />

sectional matrix system from Triodent for performing<br />

high-quality Class II restorations, and an LED curing<br />

light from Ivoclar Vivadent that features a compact,<br />

ergonomic shape to fit any dentist’s hands.<br />

14 Poor to Excellent Function in One Day!<br />

“Mini” or small-diameter implants offer many benefits<br />

for patients seeking maxillary and mandibular overdenture<br />

treatment. Dr. Ara Nazarian presents a case<br />

report featuring <strong>Glidewell</strong>’s Inclusive ® Mini Implants<br />

that demonstrates the protocol for the placement of<br />

these small-diameter implants, and the subsequent<br />

beneficial effects they have on the function and retention<br />

of the patient’s new prostheses.<br />

22 Photo Essay: Another Use for Anterior<br />

BruxZir ® Solid Zirconia Restorations<br />

In this photo essay, I address a difficult situation<br />

restorative dentists face in clinical practice: treating a<br />

patient with severe tetracycline staining. The patient<br />

in this case presented the additional challenges of<br />

severe bruxism and an edge-to-edge bite. I chose<br />

BruxZir crowns because I knew these high-strength<br />

restorations would not only withstand the destructive<br />

forces generated in his mouth, but would also have a<br />

better chance than a glass-ceramic material of completely<br />

blocking out the dark stump shades.<br />

Visit www.chairsidelive.com to view the latest episode of<br />

our weekly Web series “Chairside Live.” Also available on<br />

YouTube and iTunes.<br />

Contents 1


Contents<br />

38 Chairside Live Case of the Week:<br />

Episode 32 — A Disastrous Double-Arch<br />

Impression Tray<br />

This new column highlights a Case of the Week from<br />

a recent episode of our weekly Web series “Chairside<br />

Live.” The first case comes from Episode 32 and<br />

addresses one of my dental pet peeves: when our lab<br />

receives a bridge impression taken in a double-arch<br />

tray. While double-arch impressions can be suitable for<br />

a single-unit crown or two single-unit adjacent crowns,<br />

they are best avoided for multi-unit restorations.<br />

44 One-on-One with Dr. Michael DiTolla:<br />

Interview of David Harris<br />

According to Prosperident CEO and licensed private<br />

investigator David Harris, embezzlement will strike<br />

three in five dentists in their careers. While this statistic<br />

may surprise you, it doesn’t need to discourage you. In<br />

this issue’s featured interview, the man known in dental<br />

circles as “the dental fraud guru” shares his expert<br />

perspective on embezzlement in the dental office.<br />

Chairside Magazine Digital Edition<br />

Chairside magazine is now optimized for all popular<br />

desktop, tablet and smartphone platforms! To try out<br />

the new beta version of our digital magazine from<br />

your desktop computer or favorite mobile device, visit<br />

www.chairsidemagazine.com.<br />

55 Prosthetic Tooth Repositioning: A Viable<br />

Treatment Option for Select Cases<br />

For a select group of patients with minor tooth<br />

malposition, such as spacing, crowding, minor rotations<br />

and facial-lingual arch form displacement, esthetic and<br />

functional correction may be accomplished purely by<br />

restorative means, claims Dr. Robert Lowe. Three case<br />

reports demonstrate how prosthetic tooth repositioning<br />

can be a viable treatment option for these types of<br />

malocclusions when proper guidelines are followed.<br />

64 Biologic Shaping from a Restorative<br />

Perspective<br />

Dr. Daniel Melker focuses on the concept of biologic<br />

shaping in this article, outlining the numerous<br />

differences between this root-reshaping procedure<br />

and traditional crown lengthening. A case example<br />

illustrates how this periodontal corrective procedure<br />

can provide the restorative dentist with a predictable<br />

and successful method of restoring teeth.<br />

2<br />

www.chairsidemagazine.com


Contributors<br />

Michael C. DiTolla, DDS, FAGD<br />

Dr. Michael DiTolla is a graduate of the University of the Pacific Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry. As director<br />

of clinical education and research at <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories, he performs clinical testing on new products<br />

in conjunction with the company’s R&D department. <strong>Glidewell</strong> dental technicians have the privilege of rotating<br />

through his operatory and experiencing his commitment to excellence through his prepping and placement of<br />

their restorations. Dr. DiTolla is a CR evaluator and lectures nationwide on restorative and cosmetic dentistry.<br />

His clinical programs are available on DVD and online through <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories. For more info on his<br />

articles or for a free copy of his clinical presentations, call 888-303-4221 or e-mail mditolla@glidewelldental.com.<br />

David Harris, MBA, CMA<br />

David Harris is a licensed private investigator, with a graduate business degree and a professional accounting<br />

designation. He is CEO of Prosperident, the world’s largest dental embezzlement investigation firm. Prosperident<br />

is consulted on hundreds of dental embezzlement matters annually, and David has frequently had the pleasure<br />

of hearing cell doors slam shut on perpetrators. David has lectured at several universities in the faculties of<br />

dentistry, business and law, and he has been interviewed on embezzlement by virtually every major North<br />

American dental magazine. David is a member of the Academy of <strong>Dental</strong> Management Consultants (ADMC)<br />

and the Speaking Consulting Network. Contact him at 888-398-2327 or www.dentalembezzlement.com.<br />

Robert A. Lowe, DDS, FAGD, FICD, FADI, FACD, FIADFE, FASDA<br />

Dr. Robert Lowe graduated magna cum laude from Loyola University School of Dentistry in 1982 and was<br />

a clinical professor in restorative dentistry at the school until its closure in 1993. Since January 2000,<br />

Dr. Lowe has maintained a private practice in Charlotte, N.C. He lectures internationally and his work<br />

is frequently published in well-known dental journals on esthetic and restorative dentistry. Dr. Lowe has<br />

earned Fellowship in the AGD, ICD, ADI, ACD and American Society for <strong>Dental</strong> Esthetics (ASDA), and<br />

received the Gordon Christensen Outstanding Lecturers Award and Diplomat status on the American Board<br />

of Esthetic Dentistry. Contact Dr. Lowe at 704-450-3321 or boblowedds@aol.com.<br />

Daniel J. Melker, DDS<br />

Dr. Daniel Melker graduated from the Boston University School of Graduate Dentistry in 1975 with specialty<br />

training in periodontics. Since then, he has maintained a private practice in periodontics in Clearwater,<br />

Fla. Dr. Melker lectures at the University of Florida Periodontic and Prosthodontic graduate programs on<br />

the periodontic-restorative relationship. He also presents at the University of Alabama at Birmingham,<br />

University of Houston, Baylor University and Louisiana State University’s graduate periodontal programs.<br />

Dr. Melker has published several articles in national dental magazines, and he has twice been honored with<br />

the Florida Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry Gold Medal. Contact him at 727-725-0100.<br />

Ara Nazarian, DDS, DICOI<br />

Dr. Ara Nazarian maintains a private practice in Troy, Mich., with an emphasis on comprehensive and<br />

restorative care. He is the director of the Reconstructive Dentistry Institute, a Diplomate of the ICOI, and has<br />

conducted lectures and hands-on workshops on esthetic materials and dental implants throughout the U.S.,<br />

Europe, New Zealand and Australia. Dr. Nazarian is also the creator of the DemoDent ® patient education<br />

model system. His articles have been published in many of today’s popular dental publications. Contact him<br />

at 248-457-0500 or www.aranazariandds.com.<br />

4<br />

www.chairsidemagazine.com


Publisher<br />

Jim <strong>Glidewell</strong>, CDT<br />

Editor-in-Chief and Clinical Editor<br />

Michael C. DiTolla, DDS, FAGD<br />

Managing Editors<br />

Jim Shuck; Mike Cash, CDT<br />

Creative Director<br />

Rachel Pacillas<br />

Copy Editors<br />

Jennifer Holstein, David Frickman,<br />

Chris Newcomb, Megan Strong<br />

Statistical Editor<br />

Darryl Withrow<br />

Digital Marketing Manager<br />

Kevin Keithley<br />

Graphic Designers<br />

Jamie Austin, Deb Evans,<br />

Joel Guerra, Audrey Kame, Phil Nguyen,<br />

Kelley Pelton, Makara You<br />

Web Designers<br />

Jamie Austin, Kevin Greene,<br />

Allison Newell, Melanie Solis, Ty Tran<br />

Photographer<br />

Sharon Dowd<br />

Videographers<br />

James Kwasniewski, Sam Lea<br />

Illustrator<br />

Wolfgang Friebauer, MDT<br />

Editor’s Letter<br />

The crowns & bridges produced at <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories<br />

are now made using essentially 100 percent CAD/CAM<br />

technology, and I really notice the difference in the<br />

restorations I get back from the lab. The crowns just fit, and<br />

if I give them enough reduction, I can always get contours<br />

like a natural tooth. Before we started using CAD/CAM, the<br />

most frequent complaint we used to hear from dentists was<br />

about our consistency, so this technology really has been a<br />

game changer for our lab and our customers.<br />

More than a decade ago, new customers would tell me that<br />

they would get three great crowns from us and then two soso<br />

crowns, then another great one, then one ugly one, and so<br />

on. We were doing everything we could to fix those issues,<br />

but the underlying problem went deeper than our lab: there<br />

simply weren’t enough trained dental technicians available.<br />

There are currently only 18 accredited dental laboratory<br />

programs in the U.S. If that number seems shockingly low<br />

to you, it’s because it is. That number is down 62 percent<br />

since 1992 — a drastic decrease for that 20-year period. In<br />

fact, today these programs currently produce only about 300<br />

graduates annually for the entire U.S. To meet our demand,<br />

we had to hire people off the street and train them ourselves.<br />

But it takes time to develop as a technician, just as it does<br />

as a dentist.<br />

In 2007, Ivoclar Vivadent’s IPS e.max ® was introduced<br />

into our lab, and with this first high-strength, monolithic<br />

restoration came the day where a machine did most of<br />

the work. Ideal contours were found in CAD libraries, and<br />

dentists just had to give CAD technicians enough room to<br />

drop them in. Then in 2009, <strong>Glidewell</strong> launched BruxZir ®<br />

Solid Zirconia, signaling the next wave of the monolithic<br />

revolution. A year later, nearly all of our PFM crowns were<br />

produced using CAD/CAM as well.<br />

Coordinator and Ad Representative<br />

Thanks to our president and CEO’s unwavering commitment<br />

Teri Arthur<br />

to technology, we are able to give you, our dentists, the<br />

(teri.arthur@glidewelldental.com)<br />

consistency and predictability you’ve always wanted. Dentists<br />

often tell me that a BruxZir crown fits better than any<br />

If you have questions, comments or complaints regarding<br />

this issue, we want to hear from you. Please e-mail us at<br />

other crown they have prescribed. It’s a good time to be a<br />

chairside@glidewelldental.com. Your comments may be<br />

dentist, and it’s a great time to work with a lab that has fully<br />

featured in an upcoming issue or on our website:<br />

embraced the consistency of CAD/CAM dentistry.<br />

www.chairsidemagazine.com.<br />

Neither Chairside Magazine nor any employees involved in its publication<br />

(“publisher”), © makes 2013 any <strong>Glidewell</strong> warranty, Laboratories<br />

express implied, or assumes<br />

any liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness<br />

Chairside of any information, magazine apparatus, nor any employees product, involved or process in its disclosed, publication or<br />

Neither<br />

(“publisher”), represents makes that its any use would warranty, not express infringe proprietary or implied, rights. or assumes Reference any<br />

liability herein or to responsibility any specific for commercial the accuracy, products, completeness, process, or or services usefulness by<br />

Yours in quality dentistry,<br />

of trade any name, information, trademark, apparatus, manufacturer product, or otherwise or process does disclosed, not necessarily<br />

constitute that its or use imply would its endorsement, not infringe recommendation, proprietary rights. or Reference favoring<br />

or<br />

represents<br />

herein by the to publisher. any specific The commercial views and products, opinions of process, authors or expressed services<br />

by herein trade do name, not necessarily trademark, state manufacturer or reflect those or otherwise of publisher does and not<br />

necessarily shall not constitute be used for or advertising imply its endorsement, product endorsement recommendation, purposes. or<br />

favoring CAUTION: by the When publisher. viewing The the views techniques, and opinions procedures, of authors theories expressed and materials<br />

do that not are necessarily presented, state you or must reflect make those your of own the decisions publisher about and<br />

herein<br />

specific treatment for patients and exercise personal professional judgment<br />

regarding When viewing the need the for further techniques, clinical procedures, testing or education theories and<br />

Editor-in-Chief, Clinical Editor<br />

Dr. Michael C. DiTolla<br />

shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes.<br />

CAUTION:<br />

materials your own that clinical are presented, expertise before you must trying make to implement your own new decisions procedures. about<br />

mditolla@glidewelldental.com<br />

specific treatment for patients and exercise personal professional<br />

judgment Chairside regarding ® Magazine the is need a registered for further trademark clinical of testing <strong>Glidewell</strong> or education Laboratories. and<br />

your own clinical expertise before trying to implement new procedures.<br />

5<br />

Chairside is a registered trademark of <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories. Editor’s Letter


Letters to the Editor<br />

Dear Dr. DiTolla,<br />

Is BruxZir ® Solid Zirconia (<strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories)<br />

indicated for inlays/onlays as well as<br />

crowns? I only hear it mentioned for crowns.<br />

For patients that insist on tooth-colored restorations<br />

on second molars, what do you<br />

place, if anything? I love IPS e.max ® (Ivoclar<br />

Vivadent; Amherst, N.Y.), but I draw the line<br />

at the first molars forward.<br />

– Jeffrey L. Schultz, DDS, FAGD<br />

Bellaire, Texas<br />

Dear Jeff,<br />

BruxZir Solid Zirconia can be used for<br />

inlays and onlays, as well as crowns.<br />

We have dentists asking us for BruxZir<br />

veneers as well, which we can do, but I<br />

am waiting for some bond strength research<br />

to conclude before we make any<br />

recommendations. Veneers are essentially<br />

non-retentive preps, so we need<br />

to ensure that our cementation/bonding<br />

protocol is sufficient to retain them.<br />

For tooth-colored restorations on second<br />

molars, BruxZir Solid Zirconia is<br />

the only choice. However, you need<br />

to have at least 0.5 mm of occlusal reduction.<br />

I have a 0.6 mm depth-cutting<br />

bur in my kit that I use for these restorations,<br />

and by the time I finish the<br />

6<br />

www.chairsidemagazine.com<br />

reduction it will usually be at 0.7 mm.<br />

At 0.5 mm, you must reduce the opposing<br />

if the occlusion is high on the<br />

restoration; otherwise, the BruxZir restoration<br />

can fail. Cast gold still holds<br />

the title as the best second molar restoration,<br />

but you know as well as I do<br />

that most patients will not accept it.<br />

Hope that helps!<br />

– Mike<br />

Dear Dr. DiTolla,<br />

I’m totally blown away by “Chairside Live,”<br />

which I was intrigued to watch for the first<br />

time when you interviewed Gordon [Christensen]<br />

— I believe it was Part 3. First, let<br />

me congratulate you on the entire concept,<br />

which I found entertaining, informative and<br />

just plain fun to watch. You and Megan<br />

remind me of the old Dan Aykroyd-Jane<br />

Curtin SNL “Point/Counterpoint” parody. In<br />

any event, great job! I loved your retching<br />

skit at the end — hilarious!<br />

But you know you and your guest can’t<br />

spew out data without skeptical Michael<br />

(that’s me) chiming in. As far as Gordon’s<br />

claim that various drinks such as lemonade<br />

are 10-times more damaging to the external<br />

stain on BruxZir zirconia than Coca-Cola,<br />

a quick search (Yahoo Answers, NEWTON<br />

Ask-a-Scientist) found that the pH of Coke<br />

is 2.5, while lemonade is 3.8. On the other<br />

hand, another site (21st Century <strong>Dental</strong>) lists<br />

Country Time Lemonade as having a pH of<br />

2.5 and Coke Classic at 2.53. Gordon also<br />

mentioned energy drinks being worse than<br />

Coke, but this latter site found that Gatorade<br />

has a pH of 2.95. Bottom line: It’s very<br />

hard for me to believe that these drinks are<br />

worse than Coke when it comes to dissolving<br />

external ceramic stains, and 10-times<br />

worse? Nah! Even if pH is not the be-all and<br />

end-all factor, 10-times worse is still hard<br />

to believe.<br />

You also stated that Multilink ® Automix<br />

(Ivoclar Vivadent) was “self-etching,” but in<br />

fact, it’s the primers in the kit that are selfetching,<br />

not the cement itself. Minor point,<br />

perhaps, but your viewers could possibly<br />

have come away thinking that Multilink<br />

Automix is similar to RelyX Unicem (3M<br />

ESPE; St. Paul, Minn.), which, of course,<br />

it’s not.<br />

In any event, you again came up with a terrific<br />

idea, which I have to admit I’m jealous I<br />

didn’t think of first!<br />

– Michael Miller, DDS<br />

Houston, Texas<br />

Dear Michael,<br />

Wow, coming from you that is quite<br />

an honor! I have such respect for<br />

what you do at REALITY (www.<br />

realityesthetics.com), and it means<br />

a lot when one of my mentors takes<br />

the time to write a letter like this. You<br />

might even see your letter read on<br />

“Chairside Live,” which would earn<br />

you a signed picture of Megan and<br />

me. I’ll be sure to mark it with a dotted<br />

line so you can cut me out of the<br />

picture. Plus, addressing your letter on<br />

the show will give me the chance to<br />

prove I know the difference between<br />

self-etching resin cements and selfadhesive<br />

resin cements.<br />

Gordon was referring to an AGD study<br />

in their journal, General Dentistry (von<br />

Fraunhofer JA, Rogers MM. Effects of<br />

sports drinks and other beverages on<br />

dental enamel. Gen Dent. 2005 Jan-Feb;<br />

53(1):28-31).<br />

After that episode aired, a viewer sent<br />

me this link, http://fit4maui.com/water/<br />

pu/bottled_ph.html, which purports to<br />

measure the pH of different brands<br />

of bottled water. Could Aquafina and<br />

Dasani really have a pH of 4?<br />

Thanks again for the kind words,<br />

Michael! They mean the world to me.<br />

– Mike<br />

Dear Dr. DiTolla,<br />

I have followed some of your CE courses online.<br />

I see that you are a fan of SpeedCEM


(Ivoclar Vivadent). Do you use SpeedCEM<br />

to cement feldspathic porcelain veneers?<br />

Would you etch with hydrofluoric acid if the<br />

lab has already done so?<br />

– Marea White, DDS<br />

Bedford, Texas<br />

Dear Marea,<br />

Nice to hear from you! I am a fan of<br />

SpeedCEM, which is a self-adhesive<br />

resin cement similar to RelyX Unicem<br />

or Maxcem Elite (Kerr Corp.; Orange,<br />

Calif.). While these cements are strong<br />

enough for inlays, retentive onlays and<br />

retentive crown preps, they are not<br />

strong enough to bond low-retention<br />

restorations such as veneers.<br />

Every veneer manufacturer I have<br />

spoken with still recommends the<br />

total-etch (now called etch and rinse)<br />

technique for luting veneers, including<br />

higher strength veneers like IPS e.max.<br />

There is one lecturer I know of, Dr. Jose<br />

Luis-Ruiz, who mentioned to me in an<br />

interview for Chairside magazine that<br />

he is using self-etch to place veneers.<br />

However, he is doing it using a cement<br />

with a separate self-etch solution.<br />

PANAVIA F2.0 (Kuraray America; New<br />

York, N.Y.) and Multilink Automix are<br />

two good examples of self-etching<br />

resin cements with separate self-etch<br />

primers.<br />

The standard of care today is to use<br />

the total-etch (etch and rinse) technique<br />

with a light-cured resin cement<br />

to place veneers.<br />

The research I have seen does not<br />

show any improvement in bond<br />

strength if you re-etch the veneers<br />

with hydrofluoric acid in your office<br />

after try-in, although it is acceptable<br />

to clean the veneer with phosphoric<br />

acid.<br />

– Mike<br />

Dear Dr. DiTolla,<br />

I practice general dentistry in Petaluma,<br />

Calif. A few months ago, I attended one<br />

of your CE courses through our local<br />

dental society, Redwood Empire <strong>Dental</strong><br />

Society (REDS). I enjoyed your lecture and<br />

your sense of humor. Most importantly, I<br />

really liked all of your practical tips and<br />

information. I have been practicing since<br />

2000, and have taken many CE classes, but<br />

your lecture has made the biggest impact<br />

on my practice so far. Your preparation and<br />

impression techniques have helped me<br />

achieve perfect impressions and my crown<br />

cement appointments are so enjoyable now.<br />

My dental lab technician had always told me<br />

that my preps and impressions were very<br />

good, but the small changes I made since<br />

attending your course have helped me<br />

achieve excellent and consistent results. I<br />

wanted to thank you and let you know how<br />

useful your tips have been to my practice<br />

and to me. I hope you return to this area to<br />

lecture again.<br />

– Nadia Navid, DDS<br />

Petaluma, Calif.<br />

Dear Nadia,<br />

Thank you so much for your kind letter.<br />

I love hearing stories like yours,<br />

and I know your lab techs will be<br />

thrilled with your preps and impressions<br />

as well. They will love you even<br />

more if you send a digital photograph<br />

with all anterior cases! I keep playing<br />

with new products and techniques,<br />

looking for ways to help dentists get<br />

better results in a simple, predictable<br />

fashion. I will be sure to pass any of<br />

those your way, and I hope I get a<br />

chance to make it back to your neck<br />

of the (red)woods soon!<br />

– Mike<br />

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Letters should include writer’s full name,<br />

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edited for clarity and length.<br />

Letters to the Editor 7


Numbers<br />

by the<br />

2,827,512<br />

Total number of BruxZir ® crowns placed<br />

Source: <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories internal data<br />

25<br />

Number of countries where<br />

BruxZir ® Solid Zirconia is sold<br />

Source: <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories internal data<br />

10.6<br />

Dentistry personnel per 10,000 people in the U.S. Dentistry<br />

Source: Wolfram|Alpha, www.wolframalpha.com<br />

0.39<br />

personnel per 10,000 people in China<br />

Source: Infodent International magazine<br />

✓<br />

5,232<br />

Number of <strong>Glidewell</strong><br />

Laboratories customers<br />

in 2012 that had<br />

ZERO remakes<br />

(160,939 restorations<br />

were fabricated for<br />

these customers)<br />

Source: <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories<br />

internal data<br />

Unemployment rate of U.S.<br />

1.5%<br />

dentists (one of the lowest<br />

of all U.S. professions)<br />

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics<br />

8<br />

www.chairsidemagazine.com<br />

15%<br />

Percentage of anterior<br />

restorations fabricated at<br />

<strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories from<br />

BruxZir ® Solid Zirconia<br />

Source: <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories internal data<br />

#8 & #9<br />

BruxZir ® Solid Zirconia is the second most<br />

requested restorative material at <strong>Glidewell</strong><br />

Laboratories for these upper front teeth<br />

Source: <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories internal data


Dr. DiTolla’s<br />

CLINICAL TIPS<br />

PRODUCT........ Bluephase ® Style<br />

SOURCE........... Ivoclar Vivadent Inc. (Amherst, N.Y.)<br />

800-533-6825, www.ivoclarvivadent.com<br />

Design matters. Apple has taught me over the last<br />

few years that, regardless of how well an object<br />

does something, the look and feel of an item play<br />

an important role in the user’s personal connection<br />

to it. The original curing lights were gun-shaped, on<br />

the clunky side and struggled to reach the molars.<br />

The Bluephase Style LED curing light from Ivoclar<br />

Vivadent has won multiple design awards, and it<br />

is easy to see why. We just hired our first female<br />

dentist, and her hands are tiny compared to mine.<br />

Considering that more than 50 percent of dental<br />

school graduates are women, ergonomics is an<br />

important issue when we are sharing instruments<br />

such as electric handpieces and curing lights.<br />

Bluephase Style’s Polywave ® LED technology provides<br />

a broadband spectrum of 385–515 nm, and it<br />

will cure every dental material on the market today.<br />

The 10 mm light probe tip allows you to cure even<br />

the largest restorations because it can provide<br />

continuous curing for more than 10 minutes.<br />

Dr. DiTolla’s Clinical Tips 9


Dr. DiTolla’s<br />

CLINICAL TIPS<br />

PRODUCT........ Tooth & Gums Tonic ®<br />

SOURCE........... <strong>Dental</strong> Herb Company ® Inc.<br />

(Lancaster, N.H.)<br />

800-747-4372, www.dentalherb.com<br />

I started using Tooth & Gums Tonic more than 10 years<br />

ago when I started practicing at <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories.<br />

Once we began filming all of my dentistry, I realized<br />

how bad bleeding tissue looked when we were making<br />

impressions or placing restorations. For some reason,<br />

I had been willing to tolerate this bleeding for the first<br />

13 years of my career, but now that I could see it onscreen,<br />

I was disgusted. While the potent and effective<br />

formulas of <strong>Dental</strong> Herb Company products remain unchanged,<br />

the impact of the company’s new ownership<br />

is evident. In addition to a fresh, new look, the company<br />

has vastly improved its customer service, updated its<br />

packaging and informational materials, and provided a<br />

more user-friendly Web presence with a “Find a Dentist”<br />

locator tool that patients can use to search for the nearest<br />

dental office carrying its products. So while the new<br />

owners continue to sell Tooth & Gums products through<br />

dental professionals, the company expects to have online<br />

ordering ready to go by this summer. It’s clear that<br />

<strong>Dental</strong> Herb Company wants to be a valued partner in<br />

your practice’s fight against periodontal disease, and<br />

in our lab’s fight against bloody impressions!


Dr. DiTolla’s<br />

CLINICAL TIPS<br />

PRODUCT........ Triodent V3 Sectional Matrix System<br />

SOURCE........... Ultradent Products Inc. (South Jordan, Utah)<br />

888-230-1420, www.ultradent.com<br />

Because I practice inside of a dental laboratory, I<br />

typically only do direct restorations when they are<br />

adjacent to other indirect restorations I am placing.<br />

I was introduced to this sectional matrix system while<br />

I was testing BruxZir ® inlays and found myself doing<br />

only inlay preps for a month. While I was able to<br />

rationalize that it was OK when I nicked an adjacent<br />

tooth while dropping the proximal box and extending<br />

it buccolingually, a fellow dentist told me about the<br />

WedgeGuard interproximal tooth shield, which is an<br />

integral part of the V3 Matrix. WedgeGuard is the<br />

standard Wave-Wedge interproximal wedge with a<br />

metal protector attached to it. Place the WedgeGuard<br />

between the teeth and prep the tooth safely with the<br />

metal protector in place. After you finish the prep,<br />

you simply grab the metal protector and pull it out<br />

with the wedge still in place. Then you place your<br />

matrix, place the V3 Ring, and place and cure the<br />

composite. Genius! Go to exclusive U.S. distributor<br />

Ultradent’s YouTube page to view an animation of<br />

the system in action.<br />

Dr. DiTolla’s Clinical Tips11


Dr. DiTolla’s<br />

CLINICAL TIPS<br />

PRODUCT........ Smile Reminder <br />

SOURCE........... Solutionreach (Lehi, Utah)<br />

866-605-6867, http://tinyurl.com/smilereminder<br />

FREE $10 STARBUCKS GIFT CARD! Yep, that is all<br />

it took to get me to take the online demo of Smile<br />

Reminder. Once a month I am asked to fill out an<br />

online survey for which the soliciting company will<br />

send me a $5 check. Don’t bother; I don’t want to walk<br />

it over to the bank. But a $10 Starbucks gift card?<br />

One of my staff members goes to one of their drivethru<br />

locations every day on her way to work — well<br />

played, Smile Reminder! What started off as a demo<br />

turned into a purchase just 10 minutes later when I<br />

saw the platform’s mind-boggling suite of features,<br />

which address everything from reducing no-shows<br />

with messaging and filling late cancellations, to<br />

sending targeted e-mail campaigns based on patient<br />

surveys and giving dentists and staff the ability to<br />

record custom video birthday greetings that get sent<br />

to patients. You can even track your online reputation<br />

by finding positive and negative reviews, as well as<br />

invite patients to write reviews and post them to the<br />

sites where your online reputation needs a boost.<br />

The electronic “recare” feature alone pays for the<br />

service because it automatically contacts patients<br />

who don’t have an appointment and are past their<br />

recall frequency, pulling the data from your practice<br />

management software. We use Henry Schein’s<br />

Dentrix ® , and the front office loves that it shows a live<br />

update of each patient’s pre-approved CareCredit<br />

amount. The Smile Reminder fixed price guarantee<br />

is also a refreshing approach I wish others would<br />

take. The dentists who signed up for Smile Reminder<br />

years ago are still paying the same price today. I like<br />

knowing what my monthly flat fee will always be and<br />

that there will not be any surprises down the road. I<br />

left out about 50 other functions where this powerful<br />

software also shines. Yes, you have my permission<br />

to put down the magazine and go get your Starbucks<br />

gift card. Go to http://tinyurl.com/smilereminder.


14 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Poor to Excellent<br />

Function in One Day!<br />

– ARTICLE by Ara Nazarian, DDS, DICOI<br />

Introduction<br />

Minimally invasive devices and procedures are fast becoming the largest growth<br />

segment of the medical and dental device industry. When compared to traditional<br />

approaches, they require less anesthesia, shorten surgical and recovery times,<br />

reduce patient risk, and can offer significant cost savings. Over time, we have<br />

witnessed the research and development of smaller and smaller components.<br />

Mini dental implants dramatically improve the quality of the outcomes for patients<br />

seeking maxillary and mandibular overdenture treatment.<br />

Small-diameter implants (1.8 mm to 3.0 mm) also differ from their full-sized<br />

counterparts in several ways. Their configuration allows for a more conservative<br />

placement protocol without involving tissue flaps or tapping procedures,<br />

resulting in minimal trauma for the bone and the gingival tissues. Mini dental<br />

implants’ size also allows the clinician to place them in ridges that might not<br />

otherwise be suitable for full-sized implants. Once these mini dental implants<br />

are firmly seated in place in intimate contact with bone, they can be immediately<br />

loaded with no lengthy waiting period or second-stage surgery.<br />

The following case report will demonstrate the protocol for the placement of<br />

small-diameter implants, and the subsequent effects on the new prostheses.<br />

Poor to Excellent Function in One Day!15


Case Report<br />

Diagnosis and Treatment Planning<br />

A male in his late 70s presented to our office; he was<br />

frustrated with the look and fit of his upper and lower<br />

dentures (Fig. 1). Most importantly, he complained that his<br />

lower denture was nonretentive and nonfunctional, always<br />

falling out when speaking or while eating. He had been a<br />

denture wearer for the last 25 years, resulting in excessive<br />

resorption of the mandible. The patient also suffered from<br />

hypertension, which was controlled with medication.<br />

The first phase of treatment would consist of having a new<br />

set of upper and lower dentures (Simply Natural Dentures <br />

[<strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories]) that would fit properly and occlude<br />

functionally. Utilizing recorded bases with corresponding<br />

wax rims, we analyzed the positioning of the teeth and<br />

proper proportions for an ideal smile. The patient desired<br />

to have his new set of teeth with shade B1 (VITA Classical<br />

Shade Guide [Vident; Brea, Calif.]). When the patient viewed<br />

the wax try-in, he quickly approved them for processing<br />

(Fig. 2).<br />

Palpation and radiographic examination revealed a<br />

moderately narrowed mandibular ridge (Fig. 3). Crestal bone<br />

and ridge height were sufficient to receive four 3 mm x 13 mm<br />

Inclusive ® Mini Implants (<strong>Glidewell</strong> Direct) (Fig. 4). The thread<br />

pattern and pitch of this implant are purposely designed<br />

to immediately maximize bone-to-implant thread contact.<br />

Others like it include: I-Mini (OCO Biomedical; Albuquerque,<br />

N.M.), I6B (AB <strong>Dental</strong> USA; Los Angeles, Calif.), HM Implant<br />

(Hiossen; Fairless Hills, Pa.), MILO ® (Intra-Lock; Boca Raton,<br />

Fla.), Midi ® (Basic <strong>Dental</strong> Implants; Albuquerque, N.M.),<br />

Intermezzo (MegaGen USA; Englewood Cliffs, N.J.) and<br />

miniMARK (ACE Surgical; Brockton, Mass.).<br />

After reviewing the patient’s panoramic radiograph, the<br />

mental foramina were also located, and it was confirmed<br />

that the four mini dental implants could be safely placed<br />

within the cuspid-to-cuspid area.<br />

Figure 1: Existing dentures were approximately 17 years old.<br />

Figure 2: New upper and lower dentures.<br />

Figure 3: Lower edentulous ridge, in preparation for mini dental<br />

implant placement.<br />

Outline of Clinical Treatment<br />

Before starting treatment, all the risks, benefits and<br />

alternatives were reviewed with the patient. A clean<br />

operating environment was established, the patient was<br />

draped and local anesthetic was administered. Then, an<br />

indelible marker was used to designate landmarks and<br />

areas of insertion.<br />

Keeping correct alignment, a 1.5 mm pilot drill from the<br />

Inclusive ® Surgical Kit (<strong>Glidewell</strong> Direct) was placed into<br />

the sites and advanced to a depth of 15 mm, measuring<br />

from the tissue surface using a surgical motor (AEU-7000E<br />

[Aseptico; Woodinville, Wash.]) with generous amounts of<br />

Figure 4: Inclusive Mini Implants (<strong>Glidewell</strong> Direct) in packages and<br />

ready for placement.<br />

16 www.chairsidemagazine.com


sterile water. This additional 2 mm was the same depth<br />

of the tissue height to bone. In other words, 13 mm for<br />

the osteotomy in bone and 2 mm for tissue thickness was<br />

created to place a 13 mm long implant. Paralleling pins<br />

(Salvin <strong>Dental</strong>; Charlotte, N.C.) were placed in the sites<br />

of the osteotomies and an X-ray was taken to check the<br />

angulations to ensure proper orientation among the implant<br />

sites. Using a rotary tissue punch, a 3.0 mm outline was<br />

created over the initial osteotomies and the tissue plugs<br />

removed with a serrated curette (Zoll <strong>Dental</strong>; Niles, Ill.). The<br />

osteotomies were completed with the final drill (2.4 mm)<br />

included in the Inclusive Surgical Kit. Once the osteotomies<br />

were completed, four 3 mm x 13 mm Inclusive Mini Implants<br />

were placed in the osteotomies, using an implant finger<br />

driver (Fig. 5) until increased torque became necessary. The<br />

ratchet wrench was then connected to the adapter and the<br />

implants were torqued to final depth, reaching a torque<br />

level of 65 Ncm (Fig. 6). A postoperative radiograph was<br />

taken of the implants before initiating the prosthetic phase<br />

of treatment.<br />

At that point, the location of each implant was transferred<br />

to the denture using bite registration material (Take 1 ®<br />

Advance [Kerr Corp.; Orange, Calif.]). These areas were<br />

relieved to a diameter of 5.0 mm, and the denture was then<br />

reseated passively, confirming adequate relief had been<br />

properly established.<br />

A covering silicone (Fit Test C&B [VOCO America; Briarcliff<br />

Manor, N.Y.]) was used to cover any undercuts or interface<br />

of the implants, allowing only the O-ball of the implant<br />

to be exposed. This step prevented problems of the pickup<br />

material locking around the implants. A female O-ring<br />

keeper cap (Inclusive) was then fitted over each implant.<br />

Retentive fit and mobility were again verified. Each O-ring<br />

would create a retentiveness of approximately 5 lbs. Since<br />

there were four implants with corresponding housings,<br />

the total amount of force needed to remove the prosthesis<br />

would be about 20 lbs.<br />

The cleaned and dried recesses in the lower denture were<br />

filled with cold-cure acrylic (Quick Up [VOCO America])<br />

(Fig. 7) and seated onto the implants, allowing it to<br />

polymerize. Upon setting, the lower denture was relieved of<br />

any excess flash, and the flange areas were relieved (Fig. 8).<br />

Finally, postoperative instructions were reviewed with the<br />

patient regarding denture placement, removal and oral<br />

hygiene. The patient was extremely excited and pleased that<br />

his new dentures were now very retentive and functional.<br />

Figure 5: The mini dental implant on the plastic insertion driver.<br />

Figure 6: Four mini dental implants in place in the mandible.<br />

Figure 7: Quick Up (VOCO America) was placed in recesses for<br />

housing pick-up.<br />

Figure 8: Retentive housings, as picked up in the lower denture.<br />

Poor to Excellent Function in One Day!17


Implants Are Easy to Code: The Question Is the Final Appliance!<br />

Tom M. Limoli, Jr.<br />

Gaining in rapid popularity are these so-called “mini<br />

implants.” They are sometimes referred to as “small” or<br />

“narrow diameter” depending on the precise dimensions as<br />

well as the specific manufacturer. From the coding, billing<br />

and reimbursement perspective, let’s separate the global<br />

procedure into its two major subcomponents. They are the<br />

implant and the existing denture that is now being modified<br />

to become an overdenture.<br />

Procedure code D6010 identifies the surgical placement<br />

of the implant body. In reviewing thousands of claims for<br />

multiple implant placements during the same surgical<br />

series, it is not uncommon to find documentation and<br />

billing based upon the premise of the “single incision<br />

rule.” This type of billing generally results in the first<br />

implant being billed at 100 percent of the fee, while each<br />

additional at the same surgical visit being billed at some<br />

variation of 80 percent, 60 percent, all the way down to<br />

40 percent of the fee for the first surgically placed implant.<br />

Implant Codes and Fees<br />

When the technique involved is the modification of an<br />

existing removable denture to one becoming an implantretained<br />

overdenture, they are globally identified with<br />

procedure code D5875. This code would only be applicable<br />

if we were simply going to be using the patient’s existing<br />

appliance with modifications. A weakness in the existing<br />

coding sequence is that code D5875 does not specify if<br />

the original removable appliance replaces either a partial<br />

or completely edentulous arch. Also the fact that this code,<br />

by ADA definition, does not require a “by report” clinical<br />

narrative makes the claim delay the inevitable. That is why<br />

I recommend that the code always be submitted with a<br />

description of the prosthetic modification along with the<br />

original date of placement and anticipated longevity.<br />

As concerns Dr. Nazarian’s specific technique and<br />

treatment plan for this individual patient code, D5875 would<br />

not apply since the completed “global” procedure is in fact<br />

an implant-retained overdenture identified by code D6053.<br />

Code Description Low Medium High<br />

National<br />

Average<br />

National<br />

RV<br />

D5875<br />

Modification of removable<br />

prosthesis following implant surgery<br />

$250 $324 $577 $334 6.68<br />

D6010 Surgical placement of implant body $1,532 $1,745 $2,398 $2,012 40.24<br />

D6053<br />

Implant/abutment-supported<br />

removable denture<br />

$2,117 $2,514 $3,500 $2,650 53.00<br />

CDT-2011/2012 copyright American <strong>Dental</strong> Association. All rights reserved. Fee data copyright Limoli and Associates/Atlanta <strong>Dental</strong> Consultants. This data<br />

represents 100 percent of the 90 th percentile. The relative value is based upon the national average and not the individual columns of broad-based data.<br />

The abbreviated code numbers and descriptors are not intended to be a comprehensive listing. Customized fee schedule analysis for your individual office<br />

is available for a charge from Limoli and Associates/Atlanta <strong>Dental</strong> Consultants at 800-344-2633 or www.limoli.com.<br />

Closing Comments<br />

The advent of the mini dental implant has given general<br />

dentists an efficient and more affordable way of solving<br />

many of the challenges associated with complete dentures.<br />

In providing mini dental implants that immediately improve<br />

denture function and retention, the clinician can rapidly<br />

restore a patient’s confidence and also yield positive economic<br />

benefits for the practice. In addition, the simplified protocols,<br />

conservative procedures and elimination of gingival surgery<br />

make mini dental implants ideal for medically, anatomically<br />

and financially compromised patients.<br />

It has been estimated that more than 36 million patients in<br />

the United States have lost their teeth; however, 0.5 percent<br />

have received implant therapy. This striking disparity signifies<br />

a huge untapped market for implants and dentures! CM<br />

Dr. Nazarian maintains a private practice in Troy, Mich., with an emphasis on<br />

comprehensive and restorative care. He can be reached at 248-457-0500 or at<br />

www.aranazariandds.com.<br />

Disclosure: Dr. Nazarian reports no disclosures.<br />

Reprinted by permission of Dentistry Today, © 2012 Dentistry Today.<br />

18 www.chairsidemagazine.com


22 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Photo Essay<br />

Another Use for ANTERIOR<br />

BruxZir ® Solid Zirconia Restorations<br />

– ARTICLE by Michael C. DiTolla, DDS, FAGD<br />

One of the most difficult clinical situations restorative dentists face in<br />

clinical practice is treating a patient with severe tetracycline staining.<br />

I treated one of these patients a few years ago with a set of veneers<br />

that were conservative but an esthetic compromise. The tetracycline stains<br />

showing through the veneers were still visible enough to bother the patient.<br />

When we removed the veneers six months later, I prepped 0.6 mm deeper to<br />

make the veneers thicker. But at the try-in appointment, it was clear that the<br />

esthetics hadn’t improved much from the first set. We ended up using lithium<br />

disilicate crowns, which provided an improved result, but there was still some<br />

minor show-through in the gingival third.<br />

Not long ago, the patient’s brother came to see me. He was already prepared<br />

to do crowns, so I wanted to see if BruxZir ® Solid Zirconia crowns (<strong>Glidewell</strong><br />

Laboratories) could block out the prep shade. While not as esthetic as lithium<br />

disilicate crowns, I hoped to get a more esthetic overall result by entirely<br />

blocking out the stump shade. Unlike his sister, this patient had fractured nearly<br />

every PFM in his mouth, and the wear in his mouth and his edge-to-edge<br />

bite clearly revealed a severe bruxing habit. Taking this into consideration,<br />

I knew BruxZir Solid Zirconia was the only ceramic material that would stand<br />

a chance of surviving in this hostile oral environment.<br />

Another Use for Anterior BruxZir Solid Zirconia Restorations23


Figure 2: With retractors, we get a much better picture of the challenge<br />

we are up against. When a young patient takes tetracycline<br />

while their primary or permanent teeth are forming, the tetracycline<br />

chelates, or binds, to calcium ions present on the hydroxyapatite<br />

crystals in the dentin and, to a lesser degree, in the enamel.<br />

Figure 1: My experience with tetracycline patients is that they have<br />

spent most of their lives trying not to smile. Even though smiling is<br />

an involuntary reaction to something that strikes us as funny, the<br />

majority of these patients become adept at smiling with stiff lips to<br />

cover as much of their teeth as possible.<br />

Figure 3: This view of the maxillary arch reveals the abuse that<br />

goes on in this patient’s mouth. The effect of his edge-to-edge<br />

bite is clear from the wear on the unrestored teeth. The strength<br />

of this patient’s musculature is also clear from the broken PFMs.<br />

Kudos to the dentist who put the cast metal crown on tooth #15;<br />

it’s doing fine!<br />

24 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Figure 4: This view of the mandibular arch shows the same type of<br />

destruction evident in the maxillary arch. The patient said no dentist<br />

had ever told him that he needed a nightguard, which surprised<br />

me. (Keep in mind, I’ve found patients to be wrong more than they<br />

are right when relaying clinical facts.) Again, the cast metal crown<br />

on the lower right is the only tooth — natural or restored — that is<br />

doing well in this oral environment.<br />

Figure 5: Just for fun, I take out my VITA Easyshade ® Compact<br />

(Vident; Brea, Calif.) and attempt to get a reading on the current<br />

shade of the patient’s teeth. I have to admit that I half expected<br />

smoke to come pouring out of the device as it attempted to match<br />

this shade. The device is programmed to give the closest shade<br />

as opposed to the exact shade, so it indicated a C4 as you might<br />

have guessed.<br />

Figure 6: When I place the C4 tab next to the teeth, it’s clear that<br />

the hue and the chroma are more intense, and the value is much<br />

lower. As the tetracycline staining is technically in the dentin, what<br />

we are seeing is the stains showing through the enamel. You know<br />

as well as I do that when we prep into the enamel, this discoloration<br />

will only intensify.<br />

Figure 7: A SeeMORE 4-way retractor (Discus <strong>Dental</strong>; Los Angeles,<br />

Calif.) is placed. I used to use these retractors only when filming,<br />

but then I realized they freed up a hand each for my assistant and<br />

me. The company stopped making them for a while, but rumor has<br />

it they are starting to again. Here I am placing PFG Light topical<br />

anesthetic (Steven’s Pharmacy; Costa Mesa, Calif.) onto moist<br />

mucosal tissue. (NOTE: Don’t dry the tissue beforehand.) We leave<br />

it in place for 45–60 seconds before rinsing. I love this topical gel<br />

because it is the only one I have found that keeps the patient from<br />

feeling the needle insertion.<br />

Another Use for Anterior BruxZir Solid Zirconia Restorations25


Figure 8: Next, I use my Wand ® STA ® device (Aseptico; Woodinville,<br />

Wash.) to give anesthetic. This anesthesia system has removed so<br />

much stress from my time spent in the operatory, especially when<br />

it comes to giving anterior infiltrations — a simple injection to give<br />

in a very sensitive area of the patient’s mouth. It never occurred to<br />

me that I was tensing up during these injections and concentrating<br />

on giving the anesthetic as slowly as possible. With the STA, I can<br />

set it to the slow speed and tell my assistant jokes, creating a lowstress<br />

environment for the patient.<br />

Figure 9: The first step in the Reverse Preparation Technique is to<br />

break the proximal contacts. We will be prepping all of the patient’s<br />

anterior teeth, so we start by simultaneously breaking the contact<br />

between tooth #8 & #9. Usually we use a #56 bur for this; however,<br />

by using an 856-025 bur (Axis <strong>Dental</strong>; Coppell, Texas), we not only<br />

break the contact, but we also begin to form our interproximal margins<br />

at the same time.<br />

Figure 10: Here we are starting to break through the contact,<br />

pushing the bur toward the palatal. With my KaVo ELECTROtorque<br />

handpiece (KaVo <strong>Dental</strong>; Charlotte, N.C.) spinning at 40,000 rpm,<br />

this big bur easily makes its way through the contact. The one thing<br />

to watch out for is nicking the gingival papilla. We also go to great<br />

lengths not to go subgingival, unless the existing crown has subgingival<br />

margins.<br />

Figure 11: I then move on to the rest of the interproximal contacts<br />

using the 856-025 bur to create separation and begin the formation<br />

of the interproximal margins. When I reach the most distal tooth I<br />

am going to prepare, I can still use the 856-025 bur on the mesial,<br />

but I must switch to the 856-016 bur (Axis <strong>Dental</strong>) on the distal<br />

to avoid over-preparing the tooth or damaging the adjacent tooth.<br />

26 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Figure 12: This is the Razor ® Carbide bur from Axis <strong>Dental</strong>, my<br />

favorite bur for cutting through PFM crowns. The Razor even cuts<br />

well on those metal substructures we see on patients who went<br />

to Mexico to have their dentistry done. It feels like you are cutting<br />

through a 1950’s Chevy bumper when replacing those types of restorations.<br />

The Razor cuts through porcelain as well, so it’s the only<br />

bur I ever need to get through a PFM.<br />

Figure 13: What’s not to love about the 90-degree angle of the<br />

Christensen Crown Remover (Hu-Friedy; Chicago, Ill.)? I’ve owned<br />

this one for at least 15 years and it still looks like it did the first time<br />

I used it. It’s a good thing Hu-Friedy’s scalers and explorers need to<br />

be replaced, otherwise they might put themselves out of business!<br />

Figure 14: This is a better shot of the Razor Carbide bur going<br />

though the porcelain of a PFM we are replacing. I used to use a<br />

diamond bur to cut through the porcelain and would then switch to<br />

a carbide to cut through the metal coping. But with the Razor, it’s<br />

one and done. It even has a reinforced shank to prevent breakage.<br />

Figure 15: Sometimes when I use the Christensen Crown Remover<br />

to open a crown, it still won’t come off because of the contacts.<br />

Rather than cutting through the lingual portion, I try to grab the<br />

coping with my hemostats and do my best to wiggle it off. Having<br />

cut off many high-strength, all-ceramic crowns, I will never again<br />

complain about cutting off a PFM.<br />

Another Use for Anterior BruxZir Solid Zirconia Restorations27


Figure 16: The next step of the Reverse Preparation Technique is<br />

to prepare the gingival margin. Unlike in dental school where I was<br />

taught to prep the margin as the last step of the preparation, I now<br />

do it as the second step. In my experience, doing it at the end feels<br />

10 times harder than doing it at this point. In fact, most dentists<br />

who try this never go back to placing the margin at the end of<br />

the procedure.<br />

Figure 17: The 801-021 bur (Axis <strong>Dental</strong>) is a round diamond, and<br />

when used parallel to the tooth, it cuts a half-circle into the gingival<br />

third. This ensures we have enough reduction in the gingival third<br />

for an esthetic restoration that won’t have an over-contoured<br />

emergence profile. An ugly gingival third is almost always the cause<br />

of ugly anterior crowns.<br />

Figure 18: With the gingival margin prepped on all teeth, we are<br />

now going to place incisal edge depth cuts. The three rings that<br />

are visible on the shank indicate that this is a 1.5 mm depth cutter,<br />

which will provide an adequate amount of reduction for the dental<br />

technician to build the desired incisal edge. This is especially true<br />

when working with IPS e.max ® crowns (Ivoclar Vivadent; Amherst,<br />

N.Y.), because they can be cut-back and layered for the best<br />

esthetic result.<br />

Figure 19: The benefit of using a self-limiting depth cutter is not<br />

having to guess like you do when using a #330 bur as a depth cutter.<br />

The shank is much wider than the cutting surface of the bur,<br />

making it impossible to go too deep. Once the shoulder of this bur<br />

is on the incisal edge, I can move the bur to the lingual to complete<br />

the depth cut.<br />

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Figure 20: On posterior teeth, this depth cutter is also used to<br />

establish reduction, which is typically 2 mm for bilayered restorations<br />

such as PFMs or Lava crowns (3M ESPE; St. Paul, Minn.).<br />

For lithium disilicate crowns, I prefer 1.5 mm of occlusal reduction.<br />

I prefer 1 mm for BruxZir crowns, but this material can be prepped<br />

as thin as 0.6 mm. On this cuspid, we are reducing the incisal edge<br />

1.5 mm, like we did for the other anterior teeth.<br />

Figure 21: I am now placing a 1 mm depth cut on the facial surface<br />

of the teeth to be prepped. I prefer to do this at the height<br />

of contour, or incisal to the height of contour, to ensure that I reduce<br />

enough in that area. One of the most frequent mistakes I used<br />

to make was under-reducing in this area, which leads to bulky,<br />

opaque, ugly crowns.<br />

Figure 22: This image shows the payoff of spending a little extra<br />

time up front to make these depth cuts. Now we can grab our 856-<br />

025 bur again and go to town, secure in the knowledge that we<br />

know exactly where we are going. These depth cuts are a road map<br />

that keeps us from under-prepping or over-prepping these teeth,<br />

allowing us to fly through this part of the prep sequence.<br />

Figure 23: Typically, I start this part of the prep sequence by reducing<br />

the incisal edges. I intentionally use the middle third of the bur<br />

to do this reduction because I want to save the tip of the bur for<br />

finishing the gingival margin. There is little chance that the tip will<br />

be dulled by then, but I’m prepping multiple teeth and I want it as<br />

new and as sharp as possible.<br />

Another Use for Anterior BruxZir Solid Zirconia Restorations29


Figure 24: Here I am using the 856-016 bur to do the occlusal<br />

reduction on the bicuspid. I use the bigger 856-025 bur on molars,<br />

but it is a little too big to use on bicuspids without accidentally<br />

nicking the adjacent teeth. You could also use a football bur to<br />

do this reduction (the convex shape of the bur will give you some<br />

“bonus” reduction).<br />

Figure 25: The 856-025 bur does a great job on the facial surface of<br />

anterior teeth as well. You can see that I already finished the facial<br />

reduction on tooth #10 as I reduce tooth #9 here. Notice how dark<br />

the staining is on tooth #10 compared to tooth #8. Tooth #9 is right<br />

in the middle in terms of shade because we have removed about<br />

half of the enamel. You can already see that the margin looks good<br />

on tooth #10 — that’s the beauty of the round bur.<br />

Figure 26: I use the 379-023 football bur (Axis <strong>Dental</strong>) to reduce<br />

the lingual surfaces of the anterior teeth. The convex shape of<br />

the bur helps to prepare a concave shape that will allow room<br />

for the incisal edges of the lower anteriors. Unlike other allceramic<br />

materials that require at least 1 mm of reduction, we<br />

can reduce just 0.6 mm on the lingual for a BruxZir crown.<br />

I have a 0.6 mm depth cutter in my bur kit to measure this precisely.<br />

Figure 27: Toward the end of the prep sequence, I like to start<br />

rounding things over, especially the junctions of the facial surfaces<br />

and the incisal edges. I also try to avoid leaving sharp corners on<br />

the mesial and distal corners of the incisal edges. While BruxZir<br />

crowns are strong enough to be placed on these sharp angles,<br />

CAD/CAM mills are not able to replicate those sharp angles with<br />

their round burs.<br />

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Figure 28: Even though we know we reduced the proper amount<br />

on the incisal, facial and gingival surfaces, there are interproximal<br />

areas where it is impossible to place depth cuts. This makes it<br />

prudent at this point to try on the BioTemps ® prep stent (<strong>Glidewell</strong><br />

Laboratories) for the BioTemps Provisionals we will be placing<br />

to make sure we have reduced enough in all dimensions. The<br />

BioTemps are prepped as thin as possible, so there should be<br />

plenty of clearance, except maybe interproximally.<br />

Figure 29: You can also try on the stent that was made with the<br />

BioTemps on the model. While the first prep stent serves to check<br />

interproximal reduction, this one shows your preps in relation to<br />

the BioTemps, which act as the proposed final restorations. Just<br />

as important, this stent can save you if something goes wrong<br />

with the BioTemps; simply fill this stent with Luxatemp ® Ultra<br />

(DMG America; Englewood, N.J.) and place it on the teeth for a<br />

direct temporary.<br />

Figure 30: The rubber really meets the road when you try in the<br />

BioTemps for the first time. If you have followed every step detailed<br />

so far, 9 times out of 10 the BioTemps will drop into place passively.<br />

This is our objective. If you skip the first stent that was made on<br />

the BioTemps prep model, the BioTemps may not passively seat.<br />

(For BioTemps techniques and troubleshooting tips, view the video<br />

“BioTemps Techniques for Indirect Temporization,” available in the<br />

Video Gallery at www.glidewelldental.com.)<br />

Figure 31: Here we have placed the Luxatemp Ultra into the<br />

BioTemps and are seating them on the preps. I insist on Luxatemp<br />

Ultra because it is the only bis-acryl temporary material that goes<br />

through a doughy stage, which allows me to pump the BioTemps up<br />

and down in it as though it were methyl methacrylate — other bisacryl<br />

materials go from soft to hard too quickly for this technique,<br />

potentially locking the BioTemps into place too soon.<br />

Another Use for Anterior BruxZir Solid Zirconia Restorations31


Figure 32: My assistant has trimmed the BioTemps with a thin,<br />

perforated diamond disc, taking extra care to make sure she<br />

opens the gingival embrasures. If anything, she will intentionally<br />

create black triangles on the temps so the patient can swish Tooth<br />

& Gums Tonic ® (<strong>Dental</strong> Herb Company; Lancaster, N.H.) through<br />

the spaces. This also avoids blunting the papilla with the temps,<br />

which can lead to real black triangles when we try in the permanent<br />

crowns. I have made that mistake too many times in the past and<br />

have had to drop the prep margins and re-impress.<br />

Figure 33: The BioTemps are now cemented with TempBond ®<br />

(Kerr Corp.; Orange, Calif.) and the temporary cement is cleaned<br />

up with an explorer and Thornton 3-in-1 Floss (Thornton International;<br />

Norwalk, Conn.). The proper overjet and overbite relationship<br />

has been re-established with the BioTemps, and the next two<br />

weeks will give us a good chance to see if the patient has any<br />

issues with this change. My assistant did a good job with the embrasures,<br />

but she over-trimmed the gingival margin on tooth #9. If<br />

I were concerned about gingival overgrowth on the margin, I could<br />

place some flowable composite, but I feel confident it will stay put.<br />

Figure 34: Two weeks later the patient returns, reporting no functional<br />

or phonetic issues with the BioTemps, so we can ask the<br />

dental technician assigned to the case to fabricate the final BruxZir<br />

crowns based on the digital scan of the BioTemps. Thanks to digital<br />

technology, we can now duplicate BioTemps in the contours of<br />

the final restorations by scanning them, storing the digital information<br />

and then using the stored digital file to mill the final crowns to<br />

match. (To request this “scan & save” service, simply note this preference<br />

on your BioTemps prescription.) Things look pretty good<br />

when we remove the BioTemps, and there are just a few spots of<br />

minor gingival irritation. It’s now time to take the final impression.<br />

Figure 35: Not taking the impression during the prep appointment<br />

for large anterior cases was a difficult lesson to learn, but now I<br />

won’t do it any other way. I have had too many cases of crowns<br />

having to be remade because the temps blunted the papilla. The<br />

first thing my assistant does is place a #00 Ultrapak ® cord (Ultradent;<br />

South Jordan, Utah). This cord does not have any hemostatic<br />

agent or epinephrine on it. Its purpose is to create vertical retraction<br />

of the tissue and sit against the inflamed base of the sulcus to<br />

prevent bleeding when I pull the top cord.<br />

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Figure 36: I prefer to use straight, non-serrated cord packers when<br />

placing the #00 cord. In this shot, you can see that this cord is<br />

braided and hollow. Its hollowness makes it easier to pack into the<br />

sulcus; however, even #00 solid cords are fairly easy to pack. Because<br />

it is braided, the #00 cord starts to expand once it is placed<br />

in the sulcus, absorbing any crevicular fluids. Trying to pack a #00<br />

cord when it is wet is frustrating, so we try to dry the sulcus as<br />

much as possible first, especially at the gingival margin.<br />

Figure 37: Now that the #00 cords are all in place, we can inspect<br />

the margins and see if any of them need to be dropped subgingivally.<br />

Our goal is to have slightly subgingival margins without taking<br />

a bur subgingival. We are able to achieve this because the #00 cord<br />

has vertically retracted the tissue approximately 0.5 mm. I typically<br />

drop the margins with the 856-025 bur, and most times I turn the<br />

water off and my electric handpiece down to 3,000 rpm. This way,<br />

I can clearly see what I’m doing.<br />

Figure 38: Even though I am a huge fan of the two-cord impression<br />

technique, I continue to try every non-cord retraction technique<br />

that comes on the market, hoping that one day I can stop packing<br />

cord. So far I haven’t found anything that works as well as cord,<br />

but the search continues. My common complaint about the paste<br />

retraction systems has been the difficulty in getting retraction<br />

material into the sulcus, so I ordered the 3M ESPE Retraction<br />

Capsule after seeing an ad about its narrow tip that the company<br />

claims fits directly in the sulcus. You can see us trying it out here.<br />

Figure 39: The retraction paste is left in place for a minimum<br />

of two minutes, but typically closer to eight minutes. Just<br />

like we do with the two-cord technique, we place ROEKO<br />

Comprecap Anatomic compression caps (Coltène/Whaledent;<br />

Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio) over the preps to help keep the retraction<br />

paste in place and the patient’s tongue away. The pressure<br />

also drives blood out of the capillaries, providing us with additional<br />

temporary hemostasis.<br />

Another Use for Anterior BruxZir Solid Zirconia Restorations33


Figure 40: I find that the 3M ESPE retraction paste rinses<br />

out more easily than other retraction pastes — another common<br />

complaint I have with them. As I examine the final impression,<br />

I am impressed with how good it looks. I still think I would<br />

have had more retraction with a second cord on top of the #00<br />

cord, but it might be the best cord-free impression I have taken.<br />

I’m not switching from retraction cord just yet, but this new<br />

product is a step in the right direction.<br />

Figure 41: Having practiced around dental technicians for the last<br />

12 years, I always hear them talking about what they want to see<br />

in a bite registration. They want the bite registration material to be<br />

only on the hard tissue. They also want the material to be between<br />

only the prepped and the opposing teeth; they don’t want any<br />

material between the unprepared teeth. It simply needs to capture<br />

the incisal thirds of the prepped teeth and the incisal thirds of the<br />

opposing teeth. After taking the bite registration, we put the temps<br />

back on and schedule the patient to come back one week later.<br />

Figure 42: Seven days later we remove the temps. To clean up the<br />

preps, I know no better way than with my KaVo SONICflex ® scaler<br />

(KaVo <strong>Dental</strong>). This scaler will blast any temporary cement — even<br />

Durelon ® (3M ESPE) — off the preps, leaving behind no trace of<br />

cement that could interfere with seating. The scaler doesn’t spin,<br />

so even if you accidently bump the tissue, it won’t cause bleeding.<br />

Figure 43: After trying in the crowns and getting the patient’s<br />

approval, we place two one-minute coats of G5 All-Purpose<br />

Desensitizer (CLINICIAN’S CHOICE; New Milford, Conn.) on the<br />

preps. We are going to use Ceramir ® Crown & Bridge cement<br />

(Doxa <strong>Dental</strong>; Newport Beach, Calif.) to place the BruxZir crowns,<br />

so we don’t need to use the Ivoclean ® solution (Ivoclar Vivadent)<br />

or Z-PRIME Plus (Bisco Inc.; Schaumburg, Ill.). Because Ceramir<br />

doesn’t rely on phosphates to bond to the zirconia, the salivary<br />

phosphates do not affect it, so there is no need to use a zirconia<br />

primer. As always, we place tooth #8 & #9 first to ensure proper<br />

seating, applying pressure apically with pinewood sticks.<br />

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Figure 44: Retracted facial view of the cemented BruxZir crowns. In<br />

addition to being the only permanent cement that bonds to BruxZir<br />

restorations without the use of a zirconia primer, Ceramir is also<br />

a breeze to clean up due to its gel state during set-up that allows<br />

for any excess cement to be peeled off in one piece. While these<br />

crowns likely won’t be mistaken for IPS Empress ® (Ivoclar Vivadent)<br />

or IPS e.max in terms of esthetics, these glass-ceramic materials<br />

would have resulted in show-through due to the dark stump shade<br />

color. This is definitely one case where the lower translucency of<br />

BruxZir Solid Zirconia is advantageous.<br />

Figure 45: Retracted left lateral view of the cemented BruxZir<br />

crowns. An interesting thing to note is the visible broken PFM in the<br />

lower left quadrant. We prescribed BruxZir Solid Zirconia for this<br />

case because we wanted to use a material that would completely<br />

mask the dark underlying stump shade. It’s just a coincidence that<br />

we can see a broken PFM, but broken restorations typically are<br />

my primary reason for prescribing BruxZir crowns. I don’t give a<br />

patient more than one chance to break restorations.<br />

Figure 46: Retracted right lateral view of the cemented BruxZir<br />

crowns. Here we see another broken PFM in lower right quadrant.<br />

My point in noting these broken PFMs is that, even if this patient<br />

didn’t have tetracycline staining and instead required replacement<br />

of all of these anterior crowns due to old, leaky composites and<br />

recurrent decay, BruxZir Solid Zirconia still would have been my<br />

restorative material of choice. PFMs have a pretty good track<br />

record over the last 50 years, but when I see a patient who breaks<br />

them, their two choices in my mind are cast gold and BruxZir<br />

Solid Zirconia.<br />

Figure 47: Occlusal view of the cemented BruxZir crowns. How are<br />

these restorations going to hold up against this patient’s difficult<br />

occlusal situation? There are no guarantees in dentistry, but singleunit<br />

BruxZir crowns have the lowest fracture rate of any restoration<br />

in our lab, with the exception of cast gold, but that material really<br />

wasn’t an option in this case. Because BruxZir Solid Zirconia is a<br />

monolithic material (solid zirconia with no porcelain overlay), I have<br />

a high degree of confidence that these crowns will be intact for<br />

years to come.<br />

Another Use for Anterior BruxZir Solid Zirconia Restorations35


GENERAL REFERENCES<br />

• Zarone F, Russo S, Sorrentino R. From porcelain-fused-to-metal to<br />

zirconia: clinical and experimental considerations. Dent Mater. 2011<br />

Jan;27(1):83-96.<br />

• Holt LR, Boksman L. Monolithic zirconia: minimizing adjustments.<br />

Dent Today. 2012 Dec;31(12):78, 80-1.<br />

• Janyavula S, Lawson N, Cakir D, Beck P, Ramp LC, Burgess JO.<br />

The wear of polished and glazed zirconia against enamel. J Prosthet<br />

Dent. 2013 Jan;109(1):22-9.<br />

• Rinke S, Schäfer S, Lange K, Gersdorff N, Roediger M. Practicebased<br />

clinical evaluation of metal-ceramic and zirconia molar<br />

crowns: 3-year results. J Oral Rehabil. 2013 Mar;40(3):228-37.<br />

• Shahin R, Kern M. Effect of air-abrasion on the retention of zirconia<br />

ceramic crowns luted with different cements before and after artificial<br />

aging. Dent Mater. 2010 Sep;26(9):922-8.<br />

• Kern M, Swift EJ Jr. Bonding to zirconia. J Esthet Restor Dent. 2011<br />

Apr;23(2):71-2.<br />

• Sasse M, Eschbach S, Kern M. Randomized clinical trial on single<br />

retainer all-ceramic resin-bonded fixed partial dentures: Influence<br />

of the bonding system after up to 55 months. J Dent. 2012 Sep;<br />

40(9):783-6.<br />

Figure 48: The final result — not a bad smile for a guy who told<br />

me he hasn’t smiled for the last 30 years. This type of patient really<br />

does need some coaching to learn to smile again, and I encourage<br />

them to practice in front of the mirror, as silly as that sounds. To me,<br />

it’s not that different from physical therapy, where a patient needs<br />

to re-learn a physical skill that they haven’t been able to do for an<br />

extended period of time. With this patient, I am already wondering<br />

what I will do if he wants to do the lower arch as well. I’m not a big<br />

fan of doing full crowns on lower anterior teeth and typically prefer<br />

veneers, but I’m not sure whether BruxZir veneers will block out<br />

the dark shades. If he opts for this treatment, you will see it here.<br />

Stay tuned! CM<br />

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38 www.chairsidemagazine.com


CASE OF THE WEEK: Episode 32<br />

A Disastrous Double-Arch Impression Tray<br />

– ARTICLE by Michael C. DiTolla, DDS, FAGD<br />

When dentists attend my lectures, they are often fascinated by the clinical cases I show of what other dentists<br />

are sending in to <strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories. “Chairside Live,” our weekly Web series, is a great opportunity for<br />

me to share these cases with dentists on an ongoing basis. Episodes can be viewed online and on demand at<br />

www.chairsidelive.com, or on YouTube and iTunes. If you aren’t already a viewer, I encourage you to start watching now<br />

for informative case examples from our lab and intriguing dentistry-related news stories.<br />

The video stills that follow highlight an interesting Case of the Week from Episode 32 that addresses what is probably<br />

my biggest dental pet peeve: when a double-arch tray is used for a bridge impression. While double-arch impressions<br />

can be suitable for one single-unit crown or two single-unit adjacent restorations, they should never be used for a bridge.<br />

A closer look at the case illustrates why.<br />

Figure 1: When walking through <strong>Glidewell</strong>’s crown & bridge department<br />

the other day, I stopped to ask a technician what one thing dentists do in<br />

cases they send to the lab that drives him crazy. “I’m glad you asked!” he<br />

said, and handed me this impression.<br />

Figure 2: Looking closer at this impression, we can see that it is for a 4-unit<br />

bridge, but it was taken in a double-arch tray. I learned from Dr. Gordon Christensen<br />

many years ago that this is a no-no, and now this technician wants me<br />

to know that he dislikes this technique just as much as Gordon does.<br />

A Disastrous Double-Arch Impression Tray39


Figure 3: Turning the impression, we can see that the prep was in contact<br />

with the tray — another no-no. As hard as it may be to believe, all it takes<br />

is one point of contact like this between tray and prep to prevent the entire<br />

bridge from seating properly.<br />

Figure 4: The impression itself around the splinted abutments is so-so;<br />

tooth #29 appears to have a void on the facial and the lingual margins,<br />

while tooth #28 has some very thin material on the facial and distolingual<br />

margins. This always makes me nervous as we pour the die stone because<br />

the material is heavy enough to bend those margins.<br />

Figure 5: The margins on tooth #31 also appear thin and friable, and it’s<br />

hard to tell definitively whether tissue retraction took place. Using the twocord<br />

impression technique, or to a lesser degree by using a diode laser, we<br />

can create enough lateral retraction to end up with a big, thick margin on<br />

the impression that won’t distort.<br />

Figure 6: As I flip the impression over, notice that we are missing the second<br />

molar opposing the bridge and that the first molar is the most distal<br />

tooth. You may recall that we are missing the first molar on the lower arch<br />

as well, which is going to make it more difficult to verify a correct bite.<br />

Figure 7: Here is the poured model of the impression. It looks like we have<br />

enough reduction for the BruxZir ® bridge (<strong>Glidewell</strong> Laboratories) the doctor<br />

prescribed, except for on tooth #28 perhaps. I would have prescribed<br />

a PFM bridge, but that is another story. I am still concerned about the bite<br />

because there aren’t any stops distal to the bridge.<br />

Figure 8: When I spin the articulator around and view the case from the<br />

anterior, my fears are confirmed. I have a hard time believing that the bite<br />

from the impression is correct. I cannot believe that the patient only bites<br />

on that cuspid. Without any unprepped teeth on the opposite side to hand<br />

articulate, the situation looks dicey.<br />

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Figure 9: As I look at the lower anterior teeth, I realize the bite problems<br />

are getting bigger because this patient spends some serious time with<br />

these teeth in contact with the uppers. Every once in awhile you will see a<br />

case like this with an anterior open bite, but if this isn’t one of these cases,<br />

this bite will drive the patient crazy.<br />

Figure 10: A little twist of the articulator brings the other two anterior<br />

teeth into contact, but now there is a huge gap between the posterior<br />

teeth. Again, there is no way to verify where the bite is correct. If only we<br />

had a full-arch impression on the upper and the lower, we could take an<br />

educated guess.<br />

Figure 11: Look at all these wonderful wear facets; usually, these make it a<br />

no-brainer for us to hand articulate a case. Even a separate bite registration<br />

over the preps could have saved this impression — if you ignore the fact<br />

that many bridges made from double-arch trays don’t fit. Bottom line: This<br />

case needs to go back to the doctor for new, full-arch impressions.<br />

Figure 12: As I was leaving the technician’s workstation, he also handed<br />

me these full-arch impressions. I was instantly suspicious when I saw the<br />

trays the dentist used. Do you recognize them? You do if you do Invisalign ®<br />

(Align Technology Inc.; San Jose, Calif.). These are the plastic trays you<br />

have to take Invisalign impressions in so that the company’s X-ray scanner<br />

can read through the trays.<br />

While double-arch impressions can be suitable for one<br />

single-unit crown or two single-unit adjacent restorations,<br />

they should never be used for a bridge.<br />

A Disastrous Double-Arch Impression Tray41


Impression errors are especially important to avoid when<br />

dealing with multiple-unit impressions because any mistakes<br />

will be multiplied across the entire length of the bridge.<br />

Figure 13: I thought we had seen it all when it comes to impressions, but<br />

this may be a first. It’s a 3-unit bridge impression on the lower, but the dentist<br />

took what looks like a half-arch impression with a full-arch tray. There<br />

is also some material placed on the other side of the tray to impress two<br />

molars and a bicuspid. Was this done purposely?<br />

Figure 14: Apparently, this was done intentionally. Even on the opposing<br />

model the doctor put a large amount of impression material on the side<br />

opposing the bridge — impressive! He then put some material on the other<br />

side to impress four additional teeth. How much money did the dentist<br />

save by not impressing that lateral and cuspid? Twelve cents? Pouring<br />

these impressions is going be a challenge and make excursions tougher<br />

to accurately replicate.<br />

Conclusion<br />

Using a double-arch tray looks so easy and seems so<br />

tempting when taking an impression on just one side of the<br />

mouth, but it very rarely makes for an accurate multiple-unit<br />

impression. Impression errors are especially important to<br />

avoid when dealing with multiple-unit impressions because<br />

any mistakes will be multiplied across the entire length of<br />

the bridge. Even if the bridge still fits the patient’s teeth,<br />

the bite will likely be off, which does not make for a happy<br />

patient. For any bridge case like this, you, the lab and your<br />

patient will be better served if you use a full-arch lower<br />

impression tray and a full-arch upper impression tray, as<br />

well as a bite registration between the opposing teeth and<br />

the preps. CM<br />

How to Watch<br />

To view past and current<br />

episodes visit<br />

www.chairsidelive.com.<br />

Also available on iTunes and YouTube.<br />

For clinical technique tips on taking a bridge impression, watch “Chairside Live<br />

Episode 36: The Do’s and Don’ts of Taking an Impression for a Bridge.”<br />

42 www.chairsidemagazine.com


44 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Interview with David Harris<br />

– INTERVIEW of David Harris, MBA, CMA<br />

by Michael C. DiTolla, DDS, FAGD<br />

David Harris is a licensed private investigator and the CEO of Prosperident, a<br />

company that specializes in the investigation of frauds and embezzlements<br />

committed against dentists. I first heard about David when I came across his<br />

seminar “How to Steal from a Dentist” listed in the program for a dental meeting<br />

where I was lecturing. The title of his lecture captured my fascination, especially<br />

when I saw that it was a course designed to help dentists detect and protect<br />

against dental-practice embezzlement. I wasn’t able to attend his lecture during<br />

the dental meeting, so I thought the next best thing would be to ask him to share<br />

his expertise on the subject in Chairside magazine.<br />

Interview with David Harris45


Dr. Michael DiTolla: For those of our readers who haven’t had<br />

the opportunity to see your lecture on dental-practice fraud yet,<br />

can you tell me a little bit about your background and how you<br />

got involved in dental embezzlement investigation?<br />

David Harris: I’ve been investigating dental embezzlement<br />

for about 22 years. Before that I did various things. I was<br />

in the Army for a while; I did investigation for a bank. After<br />

retiring from working for the bank, I was sitting at home<br />

not doing a whole lot when I got a call from a friend of<br />

mine who happened to be a dentist. He said, “I think my<br />

front-desk person is stealing from me, and you’re the only<br />

guy who I can think of to turn to on this.” So I went to his<br />

office that night, we found the fraudulent employee and we<br />

got rid of her. I went back to watching TV and really didn’t<br />

give it another thought.<br />

It was a coincidence when about three weeks later I went to<br />

my own dentist for a hygiene appointment and saw through<br />

the glass of the office door the same person who we had<br />

terminated from the other office three weeks earlier! So I<br />

ran away quickly hoping that she didn’t see me, went to<br />

the nearest pay phone — this story pre-dates me having<br />

a cell phone in my pocket — and phoned the dentist. I<br />

got put through to him on some pretext and I said, “I’m<br />

not coming in for my appointment today, but when I tell<br />

you why you’ll probably forgive me.” I told him about the<br />

time bomb he had sitting at the front desk, and he asked<br />

me what he should do next. Halfway through my second<br />

sentence he hired me. Things have changed a lot since then<br />

in a whole bunch of ways. I was doing this on my own then,<br />

and now I have a decent-sized company that helps me with<br />

investigations, but the basics haven’t changed.<br />

MD: That’s an amazing story. In terms of dentistry, I guess it’s<br />

not that surprising in the sense that in most of our communities,<br />

and even nationally, dentistry is a very tight-knit group where<br />

you know and see a lot of the same people. Even in corporate<br />

dentistry, with the dental product manufacturers, you’ll see<br />

somebody leave one company and then a new CEO gets hired<br />

at another company. It seems like the same people are shifting<br />

slots and moving around. So I guess it’s not shocking that<br />

somebody who gets fired from one dental office job turns up at<br />

another dental office.<br />

DH: It’s what they know. In the case of this particular<br />

woman, it was lucrative because she was getting paid her<br />

official salary and then her, shall we say, “unofficial” salary.<br />

MD: It’s not like when she got fired from the first practice<br />

that there was a scarlet letter put on her forehead to identify<br />

her as an embezzler on any interview she might go on after<br />

that, right?<br />

DH: Thieves are pretty good at doctoring their résumés<br />

enough to hide their backgrounds. One of the most common<br />

lines is simply telling the new employer that they’re still<br />

working at the previous place and saying, “My old employer<br />

doesn’t know I’m leaving, so please don’t call him.”<br />

MD: That’s an interesting line. I get the feeling that we’re going<br />

to hear about some slightly ingenious — albeit evil — things<br />

like that today. I guess these people have figured out how best to<br />

cover their tracks.<br />

DH: Thieves are pretty clever. One of the most interesting<br />

parts of my job is witnessing the sheer creativity that some<br />

of these folks show. I will now have to disappoint your<br />

readers a little bit because our policy in an uncontrolled<br />

forum like this one is not to talk specifics. My recurrent<br />

nightmare is to turn thieves into better thieves. We do talk<br />

about specifics in closed seminars, but in this interview,<br />

I feel a little bit constrained. Some of the stuff we see is<br />

almost spectacular in its ingenuity. You can’t help thinking<br />

“<br />

The serial embezzlers ... cater to what I sometimes call the ‘wet-fingered fantasy’<br />

some dentists have. A fantasy where they get into their office every<br />

morning, do high-quality dentistry on a relatively small number<br />

of patients and then go home, without having to<br />

get dragged into the messiness of<br />

managing their practice.<br />


about what these folks could accomplish if they put their<br />

minds to honest labor.<br />

MD: I guess what they’re doing on a small scale is what happens<br />

in big Wall Street firms when there is embezzlement. I don’t<br />

know if you have come across any studies or surveys on this, but<br />

what percent of dentists would you say will have embezzlement<br />

be an issue in their office at some point in their career?<br />

DH: In the published statistics, there are two or three<br />

surveys saying that somewhere between 50 and 60 percent<br />

of dentists will be victims. But there is a confounding factor<br />

to this because there is a fair amount of embezzlement that<br />

never gets detected by anybody and therefore won’t be in<br />

the statistics. So the true number is probably higher, but I<br />

think it’s safe to tell your audience that at least three in five<br />

dentists will be victims at some point in their careers.<br />

MD: Wow, that seems like a pretty high number. I wonder<br />

how much of that is from repeat offenders like the person you<br />

referenced in your first story where she goes from one office to<br />

another. Is that a common occurrence?<br />

DH: It definitely happens. We call them serial embezzlers.<br />

There was one woman who was working in the Toronto,<br />

Canada, area. Over a period of four years, she worked in<br />

13 different practices and stole from all of them. She was<br />

really good at getting hired, but as a thief — despite a fair<br />

amount of practice — she wasn’t all that skilled. So she<br />

would get caught fairly quickly and get terminated, then<br />

move to the next office.<br />

MD: If these so-called serial embezzlers can come up with<br />

creative schemes that continue to impress you, I would guess<br />

that they have decent verbal skills when it comes to lying.<br />

So couldn’t they show up at an office and seem to be a<br />

dream employee?<br />

DH: Absolutely. The serial embezzlers are very much takecharge<br />

people. They cater to what I sometimes call the<br />

“wet-fingered fantasy” some dentists have. A fantasy where<br />

they get into their office every morning, do high-quality<br />

dentistry on a relatively small number of patients and then<br />

go home, without having to get dragged into the messiness<br />

of managing their practice. The serial embezzlers cater to<br />

that. They know the computer systems really well; they’re<br />

organized and efficient. They look like they are working<br />

hard. It’s what every dentist wants. So it’s easy for them to<br />

get hired because when they’re in the door, they cater to<br />

this idea. They’re the people who will run personal errands<br />

for you on their lunch hours.<br />

MD: To back up the impression that they are somebody who<br />

would take a bullet for you, so how could they ever embezzle?<br />

DH: That’s right. Now, having said all that, the vast majority<br />

of embezzlement is not carried on by the serial embezzlers.<br />

It’s done by long-time employees. The big stuff that we<br />

investigate is usually from employees who have been in<br />

your office for 3, 5 or 12 years. Generally speaking, we think<br />

that these people had no plan to embezzle from you when<br />

they were hired. But then something happened to them<br />

that put their backs to the wall financially, and they decided<br />

that instead of going downtown and stealing people’s<br />

wallets, just sitting at the same desk where they work every<br />

day and handling the paperwork a little differently was a<br />

better answer.<br />

MD: Wow, so it’s often somebody who started off as a trusted<br />

employee and probably has a well-deserved good reputation?<br />

DH: Clean employment record, no blemishes on it at all.<br />

One morning they just woke up and said, “Today is the day<br />

I’m going to steal from my employer.”<br />

MD: Yeah, or something happens. Maybe they lose their house,<br />

a spouse loses a job, or they get divorced. There might be a<br />

situation that makes them desperate enough to steal from a<br />

person they might have previously held a lot of affection and<br />

trust for.<br />

DH: What I’ll suggest is that there are different definitions<br />

of desperation. There are some real hardship cases like<br />

the examples you mentioned; you know, somebody who<br />

is three months behind on their mortgage payment and is<br />

about to lose their house. We also find people who steal<br />

to get things that you and I probably wouldn’t consider<br />

necessities. We’re wrapping up an investigation now where<br />

the woman who was stealing was spending $800 a month<br />

on a personal trainer, and she also belonged to something<br />

called the Shoe of the Month Club. I wouldn’t consider her<br />

to be desperate. But of course what I think doesn’t matter;<br />

it’s her perception that governs her behavior.<br />

MD: Exactly. Do you think dentists are more prone to this type<br />

of embezzlement than other small businesses?<br />

DH: Probably. There is one differentiating characteristic<br />

between the way dentistry operates compared to, say, a<br />

plumbing business. The differentiation has nothing to do<br />

with the amount of business knowledge that each owner<br />

has, or the amount of attention that each spends on<br />

business versus the other things in their trade. What sets<br />

dentistry apart is that a lot of it is paid for by third parties.<br />

So we have this unstable situation where patients, for the<br />

most part, really don’t understand a whole lot about what<br />

just happened in their mouth, and somebody else is paying<br />

for it anyway. So the amount of attention that patients pay<br />

when leaving your office is minimal. If there is an extra<br />

charge in there or something that shouldn’t be, very few<br />

patients are going to notice it and object.<br />

MD: Especially if it’s an extra charge that is billed to the<br />

insurance company, right?<br />

Interview with David Harris47


DH: That’s right. So somebody gets extra soft tissue work<br />

done today, and it’s billed to their insurance company. Most<br />

of the time the patient won’t notice.<br />

MD: My original perception was that most of the embezzlement<br />

taking place in the dental office was from the cash patients as<br />

opposed to the insurance patients. The latter seems like a more<br />

difficult embezzlement because of the paper trail that is left<br />

with the insurance company. But you’re saying that it is just as<br />

likely to happen with the insurance people as the cash people?<br />

DH: Yes, it is. In fact, most embezzlers do both simultaneously.<br />

Dentists look at an insurance claim as a clinical document.<br />

To me, it’s a check requisition.<br />

MD: That’s a good point. Without giving too much away, are<br />

you saying that if a crown is done on a patient and the frontoffice<br />

person adds an extra buildup that wasn’t done, for<br />

example, that the employee is able to skim that amount off the<br />

top when the whole thing gets deposited?<br />

DH: That’s exactly right.<br />

MD: Interesting. Have you found that the vast majority of<br />

employees who embezzle are front-office staff? This seems like<br />

something that would be much more difficult for a hygienist or<br />

a chairside assistant to pull off.<br />

DH: I don’t think it’s more difficult; they just have to be a<br />

little bit more creative. We all know what has happened in the<br />

past three or four years to the price of gold. A lot of dentists I<br />

know have what they call a “gold jar” in the back of their lab.<br />

This is where they put the crowns they pull out of people’s<br />

mouths for various reasons. A lot of dentists jokingly refer to<br />

this as their retirement. Well, I’ve had a number of them say<br />

to me that since the price of gold has doubled, the gold jars<br />

don’t seem to fill up as quickly as they used to.<br />

MD: Wow, that’s an interesting one, but it seems a little<br />

tougher to prove. Are you able to catch people in those kinds of<br />

situations? Or is that just something that gives dentists a feeling<br />

that something funny may be going on in their offices?<br />

DH: You can catch them if you install cameras. And there<br />

are indicator powders that you can put in places that will<br />

turn people’s fingers purple if they touch it. If you want to<br />

catch them, you can.<br />

MD: I was noticing the other day that cameras seem to be<br />

everywhere. Almost everything we do is being recorded. You<br />

see cameras out on the street, you see them inside stores — you<br />

even see them on the air train that takes you from the airport<br />

terminal to the rental car lot. Do you suggest that dentists start<br />

putting cameras in their offices as well?<br />

DH: I’m trying to make up my mind about that, the<br />

usefulness of cameras with respect to embezzlement. In<br />

terms of catching most embezzlement, I think cameras are<br />

useless. Because you’d have to be the dumbest of thieves to<br />

visibly steal in front of a camera that you know is there. Let’s<br />

say you have four cameras in your office and your office<br />

is open 30 hours a week, your cameras are capturing 120<br />

hours of video a week. The practical issue is: When are you<br />

going to watch the footage? On the other hand, there have<br />

been dentists who have been accused of groping a sedated<br />

patient and things like that, and to me a camera would be<br />

a marvelous way for the dentist to defend against that kind<br />

of thing. So I can see the necessity of cameras in the clinical<br />

area perhaps more than in the administrative areas of the<br />

practice. But even with that, there are a lot of questions.<br />

Placement of the camera is critical to avoid ever being<br />

accused of placing it in a bad place, say in an area where<br />

you could look up women’s dresses or something like that.<br />

MD: With most of the embezzlement that goes on, do you get the<br />

feeling that it happens during working hours while everyone is<br />

there? Or does it happen during off-hours?<br />

DH: A lot of it happens off-hours. One of the things we<br />

frequently see with embezzlers is that they come and go at<br />

weird times. It does happen during office hours, but a lot of<br />

embezzlers want to be alone when they’re doing their stuff.<br />

MD: That also seems to tie in with what you said about the longterm<br />

employees. I would guess that if there are a few employees<br />

who have keys to the dental office that they are probably the<br />

longer-term employees versus the new employees.<br />

DH: Sure, and it will also be the ones who appear to be the<br />

hardest working. They’re the ones who are going to go to<br />

the dentist and say, “There’s some stuff I want to clean up<br />

on Saturdays, can I please have a key?” And then the dentist<br />

is going to think: “This is great, I’ve got a staff member who<br />

is super dedicated. I should give them an outlet for that.”<br />

MD: When you listen to practice management speakers, almost<br />

all of them emphasize that one of the key traits to having a very<br />

successful dental office is your ability to attract and retain longterm<br />

staff members and not have a lot of turnover. This really is<br />

the first time I’ve considered that long-term employees might be<br />

the ones who embezzle more often than the new employee who<br />

is the serial embezzler. Do you find that dentists are conflicted<br />

about this notion?<br />

DH: We can’t lose sight of the fact that the vast majority of<br />

dental office staff members are honest people who got into<br />

dentistry out of a genuine desire to help people. The bad<br />

apples are relatively few in number, but over the course of a<br />

30-year dental career, you’ll go through a lot of employees,<br />

so the chances of getting one of those bad apples at some<br />

point is high. That doesn’t mean that the vast majority of<br />

dental staff members are dishonest. I agree completely<br />

with the practice management consultants when they say<br />

long-term employees are part of your success. They don’t<br />

48 www.chairsidemagazine.com


steal because they’ve been there for a long time. If they<br />

act dishonestly, it’s their longevity that enables them to get<br />

away with it. Because they know the dentist, his habits, and<br />

what the dentist looks at and what he doesn’t, they can craft<br />

their fraud in a way that bypasses scrutiny. For example, if<br />

you’re a dentist who checks your day sheet every day — I<br />

think every dentist should do that — then someone who<br />

is going to embezzle from you knows that. So they’re not<br />

going to do something that leaves a mess on your day sheet.<br />

They’ll have to find a different way to steal.<br />

MD: I know we have a lot of staff members who read our<br />

magazine, so I’m glad you brought that up. Maybe a better way<br />

to state the practice management message is to say that a lot<br />

of a dental practice’s success comes from the dentist’s ability<br />

to find and retain honest, long-term employees. The long-term,<br />

dishonest employee is a counterintuitive thought, and I think<br />

most dentists would be flabbergasted to find out that a longterm<br />

employee is the one embezzling from them. But I think<br />

it’s a good point to make just because of the fact that those<br />

employees would probably be the last people a dentist would<br />

suspect in a situation like that.<br />

DH: A lot of dentists go through a period of disbelief. They’ll<br />

see some signs that somebody is stealing from them, and<br />

then they think about their employees and they’ll sort of<br />

rule everybody out — even those who they think have an<br />

opportunity to embezzle. They’ll convince themselves that<br />

the theft isn’t happening, and then they’ll go back to work.<br />

At some point the noise gets a little bit louder and something<br />

happens that they just can’t categorize as an innocent mistake<br />

anymore, and then they realize they have a problem. A lot of<br />

times there is a denial period that dentists go through when<br />

they have long-term employees because they have a lot of<br />

trust in those employees, whether it’s misplaced or not.<br />

MD: Have you come across instances of a family member working<br />

at the office and being responsible for the embezzlement?<br />

DH: Yes, we have. One scenario is when you have one<br />

spouse who is the dentist and one spouse who is the office<br />

manager. The office manager has decided to get divorced<br />

from the dentist, but hasn’t told the dentist that yet. So they<br />

need to build up a war chest in order to pay their attorney<br />

and find a place to live because their only source of<br />

income is employment income from their spouse, which is<br />

presumably going to be cut off when they drop the divorce<br />

bomb. The spouse knows they will need money under the<br />

mattress and that’s how they get it.<br />

MD: I was thinking more about kids coming to work in the<br />

office, or maybe an in-law. But that’s a great example that<br />

never occurred to me. Do you have a list of potential warning<br />

signs that dentists might see happening in their practice that<br />

could warrant an investigation?<br />

DH: We do. This is maybe where I have a slightly different<br />

view than a lot of people who write and speak about<br />

embezzlement. Many of them try to turn dentists into what<br />

I would call untrained, ill-equipped auditors in their own<br />

practices. These advisors give the dentists lists of things to<br />

“<br />

We see everything from stealing toilet paper at<br />

the office to frauds that exceed a million dollars.<br />

The average we see these days is probably a<br />

little over $100,000. I think last time we did the<br />

calculation, it came out to about $105,000.<br />


check for and to look at in order to stop embezzlement,<br />

or to find out if it’s happening. My approach is a little<br />

bit different. What I tell dentists is that there might be a<br />

thousand different ways to embezzle from their practice,<br />

but regardless of which of those thousand the thief is<br />

using, the way these thieves behave is very predictable. We<br />

already mentioned the people who are in the office alone<br />

at unusual times. You also might consider that employees<br />

who are reluctant to take vacations might have their finger<br />

in the till. So we have what we call the “Embezzlement Risk<br />

Assessment Questionnaire,” which is a scored questionnaire.<br />

If you score at a certain level, it tells you that you either<br />

have very little risk or, conceivably, that you are at high risk<br />

of embezzlement going on in your office.<br />

MD: So are you saying that one type of employee who might be<br />

suspicious is someone who gets two weeks’ paid vacation from<br />

the dentist but never uses it and cashes it out? Or maybe it’s the<br />

person who wants to stay in the office even when everybody else<br />

goes on vacation?<br />

DH: Yes, that’s a symptom. Whether they get cash for their<br />

vacation or not is irrelevant. To me, the real issue is that<br />

they do not want the office open when they are not there.<br />

MD: I see, so they want to be able to cover their trail at any<br />

moment if something irregular is discovered. They probably<br />

worry that if they are gone for a week and somebody starts<br />

digging through the computer that any irregularities could<br />

be noticed.<br />

DH: What uncovers a lot of fraud is patients asking questions<br />

about things. A very common scenario is when a patient<br />

says, “I was in two weeks ago and I paid by cash, but I just<br />

got my statement and it showed that I paid by check.” If that<br />

call comes to the thief, they can squelch it by saying: “Yes,<br />

I know. We just upgraded our computer system and there<br />

are a couple of bugs. The software vendor is working on<br />

it. We’re very sorry it happened.” It doesn’t matter whether<br />

there is one of those calls a day or a hundred, the thief can<br />

make them go away. On the other hand, if the thief is not<br />

in the office and there is someone else getting these calls,<br />

sooner or later that person is going to say to the doctor that<br />

something funny is going on. And then it unfolds. It’s about<br />

control of information in the practice, and the thief can only<br />

exert that control by being there.<br />

MD: That makes sense. They’d probably even insist on taking<br />

all phone calls, right?<br />

DH: That’s right. They’re often the ones who almost lunge for<br />

the phone when it rings. For a dentist who doesn’t suspect<br />

fraud, this looks like a very motivated, committed employee.<br />

MD: Might this employee work on having the best phone skills in<br />

the office, so it only makes sense to have them answer all calls?<br />

“<br />

You’ll see hand instruments and<br />

all kinds of consumables that are<br />

for sale online at a lower price<br />

than you can buy them from<br />

a supplier. Theoretically,<br />

I guess some of this stuff is<br />

gray market that somebody<br />

bought in some other country<br />

and imported. But I think a<br />

vast majority of it just kind of<br />

‘fell off the truck’ in one way<br />

or another.<br />


DH: Definitely.<br />

MD: From the different cases you’ve seen over the years, what<br />

would you say is the range or average of how much money is<br />

usually taken?<br />

DH: We see everything from stealing toilet paper at the office<br />

to frauds that exceed a million dollars. The average we see<br />

these days is probably a little over $100,000. I think last<br />

time we did the calculation it came out to about $105,000.<br />

MD: Have you actually caught somebody who was just stealing<br />

toilet paper?<br />

DH: It’s not one that we normally chase. But it certainly<br />

happens, and we do have dentists complaining to us about<br />

it. Sometimes it’s the tip of a bigger iceberg. But, yes, we<br />

do have lots of dentists who complain about things going<br />

missing when the staff members are probably the only<br />

people with the opportunity to steal. Another thing is, if<br />

you look on eBay, you’ll see all kinds of dental gear for sale.<br />

MD: Interesting. To my knowledge, I have never been embezzled<br />

from. But in preparing for this interview, I was trying to think<br />

like the criminal mind, and ask myself what I would do if I<br />

had the opportunity. A chairside assistant could maybe sell<br />

bleaching kits on eBay, the kind that don’t need custom trays,<br />

like the pre-made ones from Ultradent. Those could be sold on<br />

eBay directly to patients for a markup. Is that the kind of thing<br />

you’re talking about, or do you mean actual equipment?<br />

DH: Both. If a compressor is for sale on eBay, I highly doubt<br />

the dental assistant snuck it out of the office while nobody<br />

was watching. But you’ll see hand instruments and all kinds<br />

of consumables that are for sale online at a lower price than<br />

you can buy them from a supplier. Theoretically, I guess some<br />

of this stuff is gray market that somebody bought in some<br />

other country and imported. But I think the vast majority of<br />

it just kind of “fell off the truck” in one way or another.<br />

MD: Wow, and that’s not really something that anyone polices,<br />

or could even. It seems like a difficult thing to try to get a<br />

handle on.<br />

DH: I hate to say it, but I think most of the purchasers of<br />

this stuff aren’t end consumers buying bleach kits, but other<br />

dentists saying, “Wow, this stuff is really cheap on eBay.”<br />

MD: In a dental office where the dentist doesn’t pay a lot of<br />

attention to what arrives in the boxes from Patterson <strong>Dental</strong> or<br />

Henry Schein, you might have somebody ordering things at full<br />

price and then putting them on eBay. Three days later when it<br />

disappears, no one misses it because the dentist didn’t really<br />

need it or even order it in the first place, right?<br />

DH: Yes. Unless it’s enough to distort the ratio of consumables<br />

to productivity, which would have to be a whole lot of stuff<br />

going out the back door, nobody is ever going to notice.<br />

MD: I’ve heard stories about dental assistants, for example,<br />

coming into the office on a Saturday and making bleaching<br />

trays for people and charging for it. Obviously it’s illegal, but is<br />

that considered embezzlement as well?<br />

DH: I’m not sure it meets the formal definition of<br />

embezzlement, but it’s some kind of stealing, yes. What it<br />

really amounts to is practicing unlicensed dentistry. I saw<br />

something the other day about a dental assistant who would<br />

bring her friends in on Saturdays and do fillings on them.<br />

MD: The very first story you told was about a woman who<br />

was fired from one practice for embezzling, who you then ran<br />

into at another practice. Then you told me about the woman<br />

in Toronto who stole from 13 practices. It seems like at some<br />

point they would be prosecuted. Is it up to the dentist to decide<br />

whether they want to prosecute these employees?<br />

DH: Prosecution is the responsibility of the government,<br />

not the individual dentist. So when people say, “I’d like to<br />

press charges,” or “I’d like to not press charges,” they’re<br />

assuming a privilege that they really don’t have. It is the<br />

government that carries that responsibility and the financial<br />

and evidentiary burden that goes with it. Having said that,<br />

what a dentist can do is either communicate their interest in<br />

having somebody charged, or communicate that they really<br />

don’t want a person charged. Most of the time law enforcement<br />

and prosecuting agencies will give some weight to<br />

that. Also, if somebody hires us to investigate and we gather<br />

a fair amount of evidence, they can instruct us whether to<br />

share it with law enforcement. If we don’t share that evidence<br />

with law enforcement, in most cases they will have<br />

no interest in prosecuting because they don’t have the realistic<br />

means of gathering the same information themselves.<br />

MD: Have you seen any cases where it was not a full-time<br />

employee doing the embezzlement, but instead the dentist’s<br />

accountant or somebody who only comes in once a month, an<br />

auxiliary position like that?<br />

DH: The only cases where we’ve seen an appreciable amount<br />

of theft is with some kind of bookkeeper or accountant;<br />

somebody who has some level of control over the banking<br />

function, such as writing checks. A part-time bookkeeper<br />

is the only bookkeeper there, so even if that person only<br />

comes in three days a month, there is nobody else doing the<br />

job when they’re not there. So they can probably succeed<br />

there on a part-time basis. With somebody like a part-time<br />

receptionist, however, we really see very little stealing.<br />

Somebody who mans the front desk on Fridays is going to<br />

have a tough time getting away with much.<br />

MD: Might another warning sign be an employee who insists<br />

on doing all the insurance claims herself?<br />

Interview with David Harris51


DH: Yes, refusal to delegate is one thing. Another sort of<br />

related symptom is refusal to cross-train. A lot of these<br />

people come off as perfectionists. They tell the dentists<br />

that if somebody else does it and messes it up, then they<br />

have to fix it. In the meantime, your cash flow suffers<br />

because all these claims have been sent to the wrong<br />

place. The employee convinces the dentist that he or she<br />

is a perfectionist, which generally we consider a positive<br />

with employees rather than a negative characteristic. So the<br />

dentist tends to be receptive to this argument and the thief<br />

gets away with it.<br />

MD: It has to be even more confounding for a dentist to have an<br />

employee with all these fantastic traits that they wish all their<br />

employees had, and then to find a knife in their back with that<br />

employee’s fingerprints on it. Are you aware of some dentists<br />

who have been embezzled from multiple times?<br />

DH: Definitely. In fact, once you’ve been embezzled from<br />

once, the probability of you being a repeat victim is actually<br />

higher than the general dental population. About two-thirds<br />

of recorded embezzlement is from people who have already<br />

been a victim. The probability goes up from 50 to 60 percent<br />

to something closer to 70 percent.<br />

MD: How do you explain that?<br />

DH: I think the short answer is that some dentists are<br />

probably easier to steal from than others. What makes them<br />

easier to steal from could be anything from personality to<br />

how they run their office to who else is working in the<br />

office. There could be a lot of factors. Again, the chances<br />

of hiring a bad apple in your career are pretty good. The<br />

chances of hiring two are also pretty good.<br />

MD: Once somebody in the office is caught and nothing about<br />

the way the office is run changes, do you think it gives other<br />

people in the office the idea to do the same thing?<br />

DH: I don’t think that is what happens. I think five years<br />

goes by, somebody else gets hired and that person steals.<br />

The not checking the day sheet thing is a little bit of a red<br />

herring. But if I’m a nice, easygoing dentist, for example,<br />

the staff might get the idea that they can steal from me<br />

without me really doing anything, because I’m just way too<br />

nice. So I think if one staff member can form that opinion<br />

about a dentist, so can two or three more.<br />

MD: Let’s say I think I’m having an issue in my office and I give<br />

you a call. Can you tell me a little bit about what the process is<br />

like after that?<br />

DH: Sure. The first thing we do is have somebody reasonably<br />

senior at my company interview the dentist to see what the<br />

dentist is seeing, and just try to validate that there could<br />

be a problem. Sometimes we get dentists who don’t really<br />

think there is a problem, but they have an employee who<br />

did one thing to them once three years prior that they<br />

think could be symptomatic of stealing. We usually tell that<br />

doctor that if this person is embezzling, they’re going to see<br />

more manifestations than one instance three years ago. We<br />

try to help the dentist sort out what the employee is doing<br />

“<br />

One message I’ll give<br />

your readers is that it is<br />

really important to have<br />

individual logins for your<br />

practice management<br />

soft ware. Some offices<br />

have what I call the<br />

‘unicode,’ a single code<br />

that everybody uses to<br />

log in with, which makes<br />

it very tough for us to<br />

track who is doing the<br />

dirty stuff.<br />


that should give them concern. We probably have a better<br />

knowledge than the dentist of what embezzling behavior<br />

looks like.<br />

Once we mutually decide that an investigation should<br />

happen, the next thing we do is obtain their computer data.<br />

We don’t like to work on the dentists’ computers because<br />

they’re live systems and stuff is constantly changing. Plus,<br />

if we’re connected remotely to a dentist’s computer, there<br />

is a reasonable possibility that the staff member might<br />

realize what we are doing. One thing that we emphasize<br />

to every dentist we deal with is that an investigation has<br />

to be stealthy. The staff cannot know that you are doing an<br />

investigation until the process is complete and you have<br />

an answer. Because if you think there is fraud when there<br />

isn’t and you let the employees know that, you’ve destroyed<br />

the employment bond and rebuilding it will be close to<br />

impossible. On the other hand, if there is embezzlement<br />

going on, you want to spring a trap on the thief as opposed<br />

to the other way around. So stealth is important. What<br />

we do is we get a complete copy of someone’s practice<br />

management software data. So if you’re using Dentrix ®<br />

(Henry Schein; American Fork, Utah), for example, there<br />

is a folder on your server that has all the data. We get it<br />

and bring it into our computer lab, where we analyze it<br />

using our copy of Dentrix and look for patterns that are<br />

consistent with embezzlement.<br />

MD: Once you’ve identified that there might be some embezzlement<br />

going on, do you set the trap at that point? Or do you<br />

have to have another occasion or two to be able to make a<br />

strong case?<br />

DH: No, most of the time at that point we can see what<br />

has gone on. A lot of times we’re helped by third parties.<br />

For example, if we see a situation where there was money<br />

billed to an insurance company but the money didn’t come<br />

to the practice. Then we can go back to the insurance<br />

company and ask where the check went. If it went into the<br />

receptionist’s bank account, then we know.<br />

We also look at login names on the computer and who<br />

is logged into the practice management software. We also<br />

check if someone is coming and going at strange hours and<br />

if there is either an alarm system in the office or if there<br />

is some kind of building log that tracks access. If we can<br />

correlate transactions to a specific person’s access, then we<br />

have them. One message I’ll give your readers is that it is<br />

really important to have individual logins for your practice<br />

management software. Some offices have what I call the<br />

“unicode,” a single code that everybody uses to log in with,<br />

which makes it very tough for us to track who is doing the<br />

dirty stuff.<br />

DH: I highly doubt it will stop anybody from stealing, but<br />

it will make the job of pinning their hide to the wall far<br />

easier afterward. I’ll say the same thing about alarm systems<br />

in the office. I go into a lot of offices where there is one<br />

code that everybody in the office uses, including the office<br />

cleaners that were fired who used to work there three years<br />

ago. It’s important that everybody has their own unique<br />

login code for the alarm system, and that they are changed<br />

periodically. Because it stops employees from scooping up<br />

someone else’s code by watching over their shoulder when<br />

they’re entering it.<br />

MD: That is another great tip. I love your example about the<br />

office cleaners who were fired three years ago. I would present<br />

individual login codes to the staff as a protection measure<br />

against outside theft more than internal theft, but also suggest<br />

that they keep the codes to themselves regardless. That way<br />

people aren’t looking at one another wondering who is stealing<br />

from the office or thinking that is why the practice is going<br />

through all the security trouble.<br />

So if a dentist does think something funny is going on in their<br />

office and they want to give your company a call, what is the<br />

best way for them to contact you?<br />

DH: We have one e-mail address that we refer to as the<br />

“embezzlement hotline.” The e-mail address is emergency@<br />

dentalembezzlement.com. We have an on-duty fraud<br />

investigator 365 days a year, and that e-mail address<br />

is monitored by whoever is on duty. So if you send an<br />

e-mail to that address on a Sunday, you will typically get<br />

a response the same day from an investigator who will<br />

say, “Let’s find a time when you are able to speak freely,<br />

and go from there.” We also have a phone number and<br />

other e-mail addresses, but the absolute best way to get<br />

in touch with us if you have embezzlement concerns is<br />

emergency@dentalembezzlement.com.<br />

MD: Any tips about where they should be sending that e-mail<br />

from, just in case the embezzler is going through their e-mail?<br />

DH: If they’re not sure about their e-mail security, the best<br />

advice I can give your readers is to set up a new Hotmail<br />

or Gmail account and send it from there. Just because we’ll<br />

know that one is secure. CM<br />

For more information, contact David Harris at 888-398-2327 or by visiting<br />

www.dentalembezzlement.com. For immediate concerns about potential dental<br />

fraud being committed in your office, e-mail emergency@dentalembezzlement.com.<br />

MD: Individual logins seem like a good preemptive thing to<br />

have in place, so employees know that anything they do on the<br />

computer is going to be able to be traced back to them.<br />

Interview with David Harris53


Prosthetic Tooth Repositioning:<br />

A Viable Treatment Option for Select Cases<br />

– ARTICLE by Robert A. Lowe, DDS, FAGD, FICD, FADI, FACD, FIADFE, FASDA<br />

Introduction<br />

For many years, patients with esthetic and functional problems<br />

due to tooth malposition have had few treatment<br />

options. Orthodontics is the first option to correct tooth<br />

malposition; however, not all patients are willing to follow<br />

through due to the length of time it takes to complete treatment.<br />

In a certain percentage of these cases, orthognathic<br />

surgery is also suggested to correct maxillary and mandibular<br />

jaw position prior to orthodontic therapy. Often, the<br />

patient is still faced with the prospect of restorative dentistry<br />

when these therapies are completed to gain a full esthetic and<br />

functional correction. Therefore, many patients never have<br />

the opportunity to receive the treatment they seek unless<br />

they agree to this lengthy regimen.<br />

With the advent of dentin bonding and advancements in<br />

dental porcelains, elective esthetic dentistry has never before<br />

been in such high demand. For a select group of these<br />

patients with minor tooth malposition, such as spacing (diastemata),<br />

crowding (mesial and distal overlapping), minor<br />

rotations and facial-lingual arch form displacement, esthetic<br />

and functional correction may be accomplished purely by<br />

restorative means. The patient, however, must understand that<br />

correction of these malpositions will require a more aggressive<br />

preparation of the teeth involved to align the arch form.<br />

A diagnostic wax-up is absolutely necessary to help determine<br />

the amount of tooth preparation that will be required.<br />

A silicone or plastic preparation guide, or stent, is fabricated<br />

from the diagnostic wax-up that is approved by the<br />

patient. In some cases, intentional endodontics is required<br />

to gain the proper space for the correction of tooth position.<br />

It is imperative that the patient be aware of this possibility<br />

before any treatment is started. However, as long as the<br />

patient is fully informed of all treatment options, the patient<br />

should have the opportunity to pursue this type of elective<br />

treatment, if that is what the patient desires.<br />

Case Preparation<br />

In order to determine if a patient is a candidate for prosthetic<br />

tooth repositioning, mounted study casts are<br />

required. It is recommended to duplicate the models so a<br />

preoperative model can be kept as part of the permanent<br />

record. The second model is prepared to assess how much<br />

tooth reduction is required to gain an optimal result. Depth<br />

cuts and preparation dimensions can be recorded for use<br />

during the operative phase of treatment. Once the teeth are<br />

prepared, a wax-up is done to correct tooth contour and<br />

position. Keep in mind proper tooth length and width when<br />

designing the esthetics, or “Golden Proportion,” of the case.<br />

When preparing crowded dentition, the first step is to<br />

perform an enameloplasty on teeth that are outside of the<br />

proposed arch form to bring them into better alignment. Next,<br />

the proximal contacts between the teeth are broken. Crowded<br />

or overlapped teeth will require wrap-around veneers<br />

Prosthetic Tooth Repositioning: A Viable Treatment Option for Select Cases55


or full-coverage crowns. It is recommended to use a very thin<br />

diamond instrument, such as a 30-micron interproximal composite<br />

finishing diamond, or mosquito diamond, to shape<br />

opposing proximal surfaces and vertically break the contact<br />

between the roots. These surfaces can later be highly polished<br />

with 50-micron finishing burs, discs and fine curettes.<br />

One key to achieving good results is having adequate<br />

interradicular space for development of a healthy gingival<br />

papilla that can easily be cleaned by the patient. Teeth<br />

that are out of line in the buccolingual dimension must be<br />

corrected by over-preparing the side of the tooth that is out<br />

of alignment. The opposite side of the tooth, in most cases,<br />

will only need slight preparation in the marginal area. It is<br />

important to mention that so-called “no-prep techniques”<br />

cannot possibly correct misalignment of functional surfaces<br />

without adding thickness to the tooth form, resulting in<br />

overcontoured teeth.<br />

Figure 1: A preoperative, full-arch, retracted view showing the amount<br />

of crowding present in this Class II Division 1 patient.<br />

Figure 2: A preoperative incisal view of the maxillary arch showing the<br />

rotation and crowding of the maxillary anterior segment.<br />

Figure 3: This incisal view of the preoperative cast shows the areas<br />

in black that need to be reduced to create proper arch form before<br />

reducing for the restorative material.<br />

Figure 4: The completed maxillary and mandibular composite mockup<br />

for the patient.<br />

Case Report #1<br />

The patient in this case has a Class II Division 1 malocclusion<br />

with normal overjet and crowding of the maxillary<br />

and mandibular anterior segments (Figs. 1, 2). The areas of<br />

tooth structure outside the proposed arch form are marked<br />

on the preoperative study model (Fig. 3). For labiolingual<br />

malpositions, the proposed arch form will be positioned<br />

halfway between the most facially positioned tooth and the<br />

most lingually positioned tooth. This will allow for more<br />

conservation of tooth structure by avoiding a full correction<br />

on any one malpositioned tooth.<br />

It is important to inform the patient that this type of case<br />

may require correction of both arches because, with normal<br />

overjet, the mandibular malpositioned teeth will get in the<br />

way of correcting the maxillary teeth in the lingual direction<br />

if only a maxillary arch alignment correction is attempted.<br />

This must first be verified by preoperative cast preparation<br />

and composite mock-up (Fig. 4).<br />

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Figure 5: The areas that need to be reshaped as determined on the<br />

preoperative cast are marked prior to preparation.<br />

Figure 6: The provisional stents in place to be used as preparation<br />

guides to evaluate for proper tooth reduction.<br />

Figure 7: A maxillary arch incisal view of the completed case. Compare<br />

the postoperative arch form to the preoperative view shown in Figure 1.<br />

Figure 8: A retracted facial view of the completed case.<br />

Figure 9: An eight-year postoperative view of the completed case.<br />

For a select group of<br />

patients with minor tooth<br />

malposition … esthetic and<br />

functional correction may<br />

be accomplished purely by<br />

restorative means.<br />

If the case is determined to be reasonable to perform, the<br />

patient must then approve the mock-up to ensure that the<br />

proposed correction will meet his or her expectations. If desired,<br />

the actual teeth can be marked in the same fashion as<br />

the study models using a sterile marker to show where the<br />

teeth need to be reshaped prior to depth-cut placement and<br />

tooth preparation for the restorative material (Fig. 5). Clear<br />

provisional stents made from the composite mock-ups can<br />

also serve as three-dimensional preparation guides to verify<br />

proper tooth reduction (Fig. 6).<br />

A completed incisal view and full-smile retracted view are<br />

shown in Figures 7 and 8. Compare these to the preoperative<br />

views (Figs. 1, 2) to visualize prosthetic corrections.<br />

Figure 9 is an eight-year postoperative, full-arch, retracted<br />

facial view. This case has been esthetically and functionally<br />

stable over this period of time.<br />

Prosthetic Tooth Repositioning: A Viable Treatment Option for Select Cases57


Figure 10: A full-arch retracted preoperative view of a patient in<br />

centric relation with no posterior tooth contact. He has no TMJ<br />

symptoms at this time.<br />

Figure 11: As the incisal edges of teeth #7–10 are reduced out of<br />

contact, the posterior teeth begin to come into contact.<br />

Figure 12: Following the incisal reduction of teeth #7–10, contacts of<br />

the posterior maxillary teeth can be seen from this maxillary arch view.<br />

Figure 13: Tooth preparation of the maxillary incisors completed for<br />

all-ceramic restorations.<br />

Case Report #2<br />

The patient shown in a preoperative, retracted view in<br />

Figure 10 is positioned in centric relation. It is evident<br />

that this patient is occluding on the anterior only and has<br />

no posterior tooth contact. He has been told that his only<br />

option is to have jaw surgery followed by orthodontics and<br />

restorative therapy. After mounting the preoperative study<br />

models in centric relation on a semi-adjustable articulator,<br />

it was determined that if the maxillary anterior arch form<br />

could be slightly expanded facially (increasing the overjet),<br />

it would likely allow the mandible to close and the posterior<br />

teeth to contact.<br />

When the maxillary teeth #7–10 are reduced incisally, the<br />

posterior teeth will come into contact. Therefore, the operative<br />

plan will be to prepare teeth #7–10 and place 360-degree<br />

ceramic restorations to correct the arch form in the facial<br />

direction and tilt the long axis of the crowns slightly toward<br />

the facial aspect, creating overbite and overjet. As the incisal<br />

edges are shortened, the posterior teeth come into contact<br />

(Figs. 11, 12). Once this occurs, the teeth must then be depth<br />

cut on the facial and palatal aspects to allow for the thickness<br />

of the ceramic material (Fig. 13).<br />

Figure 14 shows the case completed after the four maxillary<br />

incisor restorations are delivered. Note the functional<br />

contact that now exists in centric occlusion for the patient.<br />

Although the crossbite cannot be addressed without restoration<br />

of the posterior teeth and a full-mouth reconstruction,<br />

the patient has gained a stable occlusal situation by the restoration<br />

of four teeth without invasive orthognathic surgery.<br />

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Figure 14: After placement of the ceramic restorations, contacts in<br />

the posterior region can now be seen back to the first molar region,<br />

giving this patient a more stable intercuspation in centric occlusion.<br />

Figure 15: A preoperative smile view of a dentally compensated<br />

Class II malocclusion.<br />

Figure 16: From this preoperative incisal/occlusal view, there is a<br />

great deal of crowding and rotation because the teeth are tipped lingually,<br />

constricting the arch form and pushing teeth out of the arch.<br />

Figure 17: An incisal view of teeth #5–8 after breaking the proximal<br />

contacts and separating the teeth (interproximal reduction, or IPR). It<br />

is important to separate the root forms at the gingival crest interproximally<br />

with a mosquito diamond, allowing retraction cord to be placed.<br />

This will ensure proper space for the emergence profiles and healthy<br />

interproximal gingival tissue.<br />

Case Report #3<br />

The patient shown in Figure 15 presented with a dentally<br />

compensated Class II malocclusion. He had never pursued<br />

esthetic dental treatment because he was consistently told<br />

that his functional and esthetic dental problems could not<br />

be corrected without orthognathic surgery and orthodontics<br />

prior to restorative therapy. In his opinion, the cure was<br />

worse than the disease.<br />

After working up the case on study models as previously described,<br />

it was determined that this patient could be helped<br />

prosthetically without surgical intervention. Figure 16 is an<br />

occlusal/incisal view of the preoperative maxillary arch. The<br />

orthodontic approach to unraveling this crowded arch would<br />

be expansion, or tipping the teeth in the labial direction. This<br />

would increase the arch length and allow for proper tooth<br />

alignment. It would also increase the overjet, resulting in a<br />

more Class II-like appearance.<br />

When planning to orthodontically prepare these teeth, it is<br />

important to note that correcting the lingual inclination of<br />

the clinical crowns will have the same effect in gaining arch<br />

length. There will be very little need to prepare these teeth<br />

on the facial surfaces. The majority of the tooth reduction<br />

will be on the proximal and lingual surfaces to orthodontically<br />

correct the clinical crown angulation with the bur<br />

(“diamond-driven orthodontics”).<br />

Prosthetic Tooth Repositioning: A Viable Treatment Option for Select Cases59


Figure 18: A facial view of teeth #5–8 after selective reduction on the<br />

facial and lingual surfaces to remove excess tooth structure outside<br />

the proposed arch form.<br />

Figure 19: An incisal view of the preparations for teeth #5–8 after<br />

depth cutting and two-plane reduction. This process is referred to as<br />

“orthodontic tooth preparation.” Note that the prepared incisal edges<br />

now follow a nice arch form that will be followed in the definitive restorations.<br />

Compare this to the varied directions of the incisal edges in<br />

the preoperative condition in Figure 16.<br />

Figure 20: A facial view of the completed preparations. These<br />

orthodontically prepared teeth are now ready to accept restorations<br />

that will not only correct the clinical crown positions, but will also<br />

be structurally sound and esthetic due to the space created for the<br />

proper thickness of restorative material.<br />

Figure 21: A facial view of the correction of the maxillary arch after<br />

provisionalization with a rubberized urethane provisional material<br />

(Tuff-Temp [Pulpdent Corporation; Watertown, Mass.]).<br />

Interproximal reduction, or IPR, is performed in a similar<br />

fashion to that of conventional orthodontics. The goal is to<br />

separate the prepared teeth at the free gingival crest (Fig. 17).<br />

The facial surfaces of the rotated teeth are reshaped in areas<br />

that are facial to the proposed completed arch form (Fig. 18).<br />

Lastly, depth cutting and two-plane reduction is performed<br />

to allow for the proper positioning and thickness of the<br />

definitive restorations (Fig. 19).<br />

Figure 20 shows the completed preparations from the facial<br />

view. Looking only at the final shape of the final preparations<br />

of the teeth prior to master impression-making, one<br />

would be hard-pressed to know how severe the preoperative<br />

crowding and rotations were.<br />

After making the master impression, taking a facebow<br />

transfer and making interocclusal records, the preparations<br />

60 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Figure 22: The delivered maxillary restorations and the provisionalized<br />

mandibular arch.<br />

Figure 23: An incisal/occlusal view of the definitive restorations on<br />

the maxillary arch after delivery. Compare this to the preoperative<br />

view in Figure 16. Note that the crown forms have normal anatomic<br />

contours and incisal edge thickness even after prosthetic correction<br />

of the original misalignment.<br />

Figure 24: An incisal/occlusal view of the definitive restorations on<br />

the mandibular arch after delivery.<br />

Figure 25: A postoperative smile view of the completed case. This<br />

patient chose A1 as the final shade of the ceramics (IPS e.max ®<br />

[Ivoclar Vivadent; Amherst N.Y.]). Compare this to the preoperative<br />

smile view in Figure 15. An amazing transformation in esthetics and<br />

arch form accomplished without surgery or braces was achieved for<br />

this patient with careful planning and precise clinical execution from<br />

preparation and provisionalization to delivery.<br />

are provisionalized using a rubberized urethane provisional<br />

material and a clear plastic stent made from a diagnostic<br />

mock-up of the case (Fig. 21).<br />

At the following appointment, the maxillary restorations are<br />

delivered and the mandibular arch is prepared in the same<br />

fashion as previously described, and then provisionalized<br />

(Fig. 22). Figure 23 shows the completed maxillary arch<br />

from the occlusal/incisal view after delivery of the definitive<br />

restorations on teeth #5–13. Figure 24 shows the completed<br />

mandibular restoration from the occlusal/incisal. The completed<br />

smile view is shown in Figure 25. Compare this final<br />

result to the preoperative smile view in Figure 15 to see the<br />

remarkable transformation!<br />

Prosthetic Tooth Repositioning: A Viable Treatment Option for Select Cases61


Conclusion<br />

Prosthetic tooth repositioning is a viable treatment option<br />

for select malocclusions that require esthetic and functional<br />

correction. The stability of these cases has been shown<br />

clinically when proper guidelines have been followed. Some<br />

specialists have editorialized that this type of treatment is a<br />

“quick-fix cop-out,” arguing that patients should be talked<br />

into the ortho/surgical approach for these types of cases. It<br />

is important to note that crowded dentition is very difficult<br />

to clean, which can pose a challenge to maintaining proper<br />

periodontal health, so it is very common to see these patients<br />

with chronic marginal and interproximal gingivitis and, in<br />

later years, full-blown periodontitis when these problems<br />

are not addressed and corrected. Therefore, it is important<br />

to emphasize to patients that these corrections, no matter<br />

how they are accomplished, are needed for dental health<br />

reasons as much as they are for esthetic correction. Just ask<br />

these patients if the sacrifice of a little more tooth structure<br />

versus the more “conservative” surgical approach was worth<br />

it for them. It is always best to present all of the treatment<br />

options and let patients help decide the course of treatment<br />

that best suits their needs. CM<br />

Prosthetic tooth<br />

repositioning is a viable<br />

treatment option for select<br />

malocclusions that require<br />

esthetic and functional<br />

correction. The stability<br />

of these cases has been<br />

shown clinically when<br />

proper guidelines have<br />

been followed.<br />

Dr. Robert Lowe is in private practice in Charlotte, N.C. He also lectures internationally<br />

and publishes on esthetic and restorative dentistry. Contact him at<br />

boblowedds@aol.com or 704-450-3321.<br />

Acknowledgement<br />

The author would like to acknowledge the ceramic artistry of William “CK”<br />

Kim, CDT, of Yes <strong>Dental</strong> Lab in Case #1; Mike Felgenhauer, CDT, of <strong>Dental</strong> Arts<br />

Precision Laboratory in Case #2; and Nadar Hedeshi, CDT, in Case #3.<br />

62 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Biologic Shaping from a<br />

Restorative Perspective<br />

– ARTICLE by Daniel J. Melker, DDS<br />

64 www.chairsidemagazine.com


In today’s world of advanced dental procedures and<br />

technology, traditional or classic dental principles can<br />

easily be lost. This may especially be true with the<br />

decision-making process of saving teeth. Implants are<br />

wonderful options when appropriate, but they should not<br />

be selected when a tooth can be saved using a predictable<br />

perio or restorative protocol that yields excellent long-term<br />

prognoses. Too often today, good teeth are being removed<br />

in favor of implant placement that is occurring in a clinical<br />

environment of inadequate bone and soft tissue, as well<br />

as biomechanical compromise. Biologic shaping and soft<br />

tissue grafting offer a classic, proven methodology for<br />

treating teeth with absolute predictability.<br />

Often our restorative treatment plans lead us to subgingival<br />

margins, furcation involvement, root flutes and concavities,<br />

in addition to a multitude of complex issues. Many of the<br />

issues we face are in the subgingival environment and require<br />

periodontal corrective procedures to return the foundation<br />

to a healthy state. Traditionally, crown lengthening was<br />

indicated for deep subgingival margins, not only to facilitate<br />

impression making but also to correct biologic width<br />

infringements. Biologic shaping is a periodontal corrective<br />

procedure reported in the literature 1 that may complement<br />

traditional crown lengthening, yet it differs from traditional<br />

crown lengthening in the following ways:<br />

5.<br />

6.<br />

calculus and caries formation. Biologic shaping<br />

leaves the subgingival area as smooth as glass; there<br />

are no areas for plaque, calculus or caries to hide.<br />

Traditional crown lengthening worsens crown-toroot<br />

ratio. Biologic shaping maintains crown-to-root<br />

ratio.<br />

Traditional perio is about pockets and probing. Biologic<br />

shaping is about preserving bone, smoothing<br />

out the rough spots, and making restorative dentistry<br />

predictable and a joy to perform.<br />

The concept of biologic shaping is presented in the case<br />

that follows. The procedure stresses a 360-degree removal<br />

of tooth surface irregularities as well as all cementoenamel<br />

junctions (CEJs) and existing margins. An important aspect<br />

of the procedure is to remove any concavities or furcation<br />

involvements. Once the root surfaces are perfectly smooth,<br />

the flap is placed just coronal to the osseous surface and<br />

sutured in place. After 12 to 14 weeks of healing, the<br />

restorative dentist simply places a new margin just coronal<br />

to the gingival collar, which allows for a perfect impression<br />

to be taken. This case also features the specific correction of<br />

a mesial concavity on an upper first bicuspid.<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

4.<br />

Traditional crown lengthening moves the bone away<br />

from the margin. Biologic shaping moves the margin<br />

away from the bone.<br />

Traditional crown lengthening requires osseous<br />

surgery to re-establish the biologic width. Biologic<br />

shaping may require minor osseous surgery, but<br />

it generally avoids major osseous surgery and still<br />

re-establishes biologic width because you have the<br />

choice to locate your restorative margin coronal to<br />

the old restorative margin (0.5 mm apical to the core<br />

is the coronal extent).<br />

Traditional crown lengthening may open furcations<br />

and render a poor prognosis. Biologic shaping<br />

preserves the integrity of the furcation because<br />

aggressive osseous surgery was not needed.<br />

Traditional crown lengthening does not eliminate<br />

flutes, concavities or root clefts, leaving the<br />

postoperative lengthened crown at risk for disease<br />

recurrence due to increased susceptibility for plaque,<br />

Case Presentation<br />

Figure 1: This patient will undergo a maxillary full-arch restoration to<br />

correct occlusal issues and mild periodontal disease. When performing<br />

definitive restorative procedures, it is critical to have an ideal periodontal<br />

foundation to restore. There was an initial discussion on whether to restore<br />

the bicuspids. After review of occlusal issues, it was decided to include the<br />

bicuspids in the provisional phase of treatment.<br />

Biologic Shaping from a Restorative Perspective65


Figure 2: Upon reflection of the tissue with a full-thickness flap due to<br />

the existing thick bone, the tooth surfaces exhibited calculus located in<br />

concavities.<br />

Figure 3: From a slightly different angle, the irregular contours of the bone<br />

can be seen. Osseous contouring will be necessary to create contours that<br />

will be compatible with the soft tissue when it is replaced. Once the flap is<br />

reflected, a split-thickness dissection is used to preserve the periosteum<br />

for suturing of the flap and for stability.<br />

Figure 4: Using a C847-016 diamond bur (Axis <strong>Dental</strong>; Coppell, Texas), the<br />

tooth surface is gently smoothed to remove any irregularities of the root<br />

surface, as well as all CEJs. The concavity on the upper first bicuspid is also<br />

removed by gently blending the line angles approximating the concavity.<br />

Removal of the middle tooth surface of the bicuspid was avoided so as<br />

not to deepen the concavity.<br />

Figure 5: Once the gross removal of tooth structure is completed, an<br />

F847-016 diamond bur (Axis <strong>Dental</strong>) is used to smooth the root surface.<br />

Biologic shaping and soft tissue grafting offer a ... proven<br />

methodology for treating teeth with absolute predictability.<br />

66 www.chairsidemagazine.com


Figure 6: A C801L-023 diamond round bur (Axis <strong>Dental</strong>) is then used to<br />

properly contour the bone to mimic the soft tissue. The term for this procedure<br />

is “creating a parabolic architecture,” and it is the key to forming an<br />

ideal interface between bone, tooth and tissue. This phase of the surgery<br />

helps to avoid the formation of pockets between the bone and soft tissue<br />

when the tissue is replaced.<br />

Figure 7: Upon completion of the biologic shaping and osseous contouring,<br />

an ideal foundation is created over which the soft tissue can be sutured<br />

in place.<br />

Figure 8: 5-0 chromic gut suture material is used to replace the flap just<br />

coronal to the osseous underlying foundation. An important aspect of<br />

suturing the flap is to involve the periosteum as an attachment apparatus<br />

for the suture. The suture grabs the periosteum apically to allow for perfect<br />

placement of the flap so that no movement or displacement of the flap can<br />

occur. There is no need for any dressing to be placed.<br />

Figure 9: An occlusal view showing as much primary closure of the flaps<br />

as possible. This allows for decreased discomfort in the healing phase.<br />

Also note that no CEJs are present on any of the teeth. A recent article<br />

by Rapley and Cobb, et al. 2 demonstrated with electron microscopy that<br />

the CEJs tend to hold biofilm and that these areas can be a source of<br />

periodontal breakdown. It is the belief of the author that by removing the<br />

CEJs, we are treating a cause of future breakdown, thus changing the<br />

environment for long-term maintenance.<br />

The procedure stresses a 360-degree removal of tooth<br />

surface irregularities ... all CEJs and existing margins.<br />

Biologic Shaping from a Restorative Perspective67


Biologic shaping is about preserving bone,<br />

smoothing out the rough spots, and making<br />

restorative dentistry predictable and a joy to perform.<br />

Figure 10: The day of the reline appointment after four weeks of healing.<br />

The provisionals will be closed to fit the teeth, leaving 1 mm of space<br />

between the provisional and the tooth surface to allow for future biologic<br />

width growth in a coronal direction. No prepping of the tooth surface is<br />

done at this appointment.<br />

Figure 11: Impressions day, 12 weeks post-op. All margins are placed<br />

just coronal to the gingival collars. A size 7/00 SilTrax ® cord (Pascal<br />

International; Bellevue, Wash.) is placed in the sulcus to allow for the lab<br />

technicians to trim the dies.<br />

Figures 12–14: Final restorations placed. All are IPS e.max ® crowns<br />

(Ivoclar Vivadent; Amherst, N.Y.) with the exception of full-coverage gold<br />

on the second molars. All margins are supragingival. Ideal health exists<br />

between the crowns and the soft tissue with no inflammation present.<br />

(Restorations courtesy of Dr. Howard Chasolen of Sarasota, Fla.) CM<br />

Dr. Daniel Melker is in private practice in Clearwater, Fla., and lectures nationwide<br />

on periodontics and prosthodontics. Contact him at 727-725-0100.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Melker DJ, Richardson CR. Root reshaping: an integral component of periodontal<br />

surgery. Int J Periodontics Restorative Dent. 2001 Jun;21(3):296-304.<br />

2. Satheesh K, MacNeill SR, Rapley JW, Cobb CM. The CEJ: a biofilm and calculus<br />

trap. Compend Contin Educ Dent. 2011 Mar;32(2):30, 32-7.<br />

68 www.chairsidemagazine.com

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