Don't miss an issue! Renew/subscribe for FREE today.
×

Dr. Steven Eckert Chosen as 10th Nobel Biocare Brånemark Osseointegration Award Winner

Posted on Friday, March 17, 2017

Arlington Heights, Ill., March 16, 2017 -- Dr. Steven E. Eckert was honored today the prestigious Nobel Biocare Brånemark Osseointegration Award during the Opening Symposium of Academy of Osseointegration’s (AO) 2017 Annual Meeting. The award was presented by the Osseointegration Foundation’s (OF) president Dr. Myron Nevins.

The award is given annually by OF, AO’s philanthropic arm. It honors individuals whose impact on, and leadership in, implant dentistry is exemplary in any or all of the Foundation’s mission categories: research, education, and charitable causes.

A former AO president, Dr. Eckert in 2006 became the second editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Implants (IJOMI), a position he still holds.

“Dr. Steven Eckert has a distinguished record of leadership in the Academy, rising to president in 2007,” said Dr. Myron Nevins, president of AO.  “He has done a remarkable job as editor-in-chief of IJOMI, extending the horizons of our journal, especially with expansion of the electronic edition.  He has inspired professionals in our field to author papers, and we are all grateful for the information IJOMI provides.  It all translates into significant improvement in clinical practice and improved patient results.”

In 1991, Dr. Eckert joined AO and remembers concentrating on broadening the international reach of the Academy.  He is currently Professor Emeritus at the Mayo Clinic and Adjunct Professor at the University of Minnesota School of Dentistry.  Dr. Eckert practices at ClearChoice Dental Implant Center in Minneapolis and is Director of Research for ClearChoice.

Previous Nobel Biocare Brånemark Osseointegration Award honorees are (in chronological order) Per-Ingvar Brånemark, MD, PhD, William R. Laney, DMD, MS, George A. Zarb, BChD, DDS, MS, Daniel VanSteenberge, MD, PhD, Ulf Lekholm, DDS, Daniel Buser, DDS, DMD, Professor Tomas Albrektsson, Stephen M. Parel, DDS, and Ole Jensen, DMD.  The award is made possible by a grant from Nobel Biocare.  The selection process involves members of the OF’s Titanium Society to propose distinguished candidates.







Mydent Announces New DEFENDLOC PRE-FOLDED Sterilization Pouches

Posted on Monday, March 13, 2017

HAUPPAUGE, NY:  — Dental practices demand that infection control disposables deliver quality, consistency, ease of use and value. DEFENDLOC PRE-FOLDED Sterilization Pouches meet all of these criteria and more. Sometimes a minor design modification can make a major difference in product performance. DEFENDLOC is an example of that. Mydent’s popular Defend+Plus Sterilization Pouches are already known for their safety and structural advantages — yet Mydent has found a way to improve them with DEFENDLOC.

The newly redesigned DEFENDLOC PRE-FOLDED Sterilization Pouch incorporates a patent-pending technology — making instrument sterilization safer, more effective, quicker, and virtually foolproof for the entire dental staff.

DEFENDLOC PRE-FOLDED Sterilization Pouches key features and benefits:

·      Safer sterilization with a complete and uniform seal of the pouch.

·      Quicker and extremely easy to make a perfect seal every time as compared to other competitive pouches.

·      New pre-folded flap closure folds perfectly into place, eliminating time consuming flap adjustment and helping to ensure the best seal possible. This helps eliminate misaligned seals that can compromise sterility.

·      Reinforced plastic pouch and rugged medical-grade paper guard against tears and perforations.

·      Award-winning design and fabrication emphasize durability and ease of use.

·      A strategically placed thumb notch simplifies pouch opening and instrument removal.

·      Pouches are constructed with dual internal and external indicators that change color when the optimum sterilization temperature has been reached, both in the autoclave chamber and inside the pouch.

·      Available in multiple sizes, this newly improved product is offered at the same low price as the original Defend+Plus Sterilization Pouch.

Mydent International is dedicated to fully maintaining its brand promise: "To provide the healthcare professional with the highest quality infection control products, disposables, preventatives, impression material systems, rotary instruments and restoratives at affordable prices, supported by superior service and 100% Customer Satisfaction."

DEFEND. Works Better.  Lasts Longer.  Costs Less.  For more information on Mydent International and the DEFEND brand of products, call 800-275-0020, or visit www.defend.com.







BIOLASE Appoints VP of Sales for Americas

Posted on Monday, March 13, 2017

BIOLASE, Inc. announced it has appointed veteran sales executive James (Jim) D. Surek as its Vice President of Sales for the Americas, effective March 13, 2017.  He will report to BIOLASE President and CEO Harold C. Flynn, Jr.

Surek, 49, brings with him more than 24 years of experience in medical device sales and sales leadership in start-up, turnaround, and high-growth environments.

Most recently, Surek served as the Vice President of Sales for Entellus Medical, Inc., a venture-backed startup. Since joining the company in 2010, he built a 150-person top-performing sales organization, went head-to-head against market leaders Johnson and Johnson and Medtronic, built a 65% market share in the office procedure market, and elevated sales growth, leading to a successful IPO in 2015.

“Jim has deep experience in medical device sales leadership,” Flynn says.  “He has built strong teams and has rapidly grown revenue in challenging markets and against formidable competitors. At this very exciting time at BIOLASE, with the recent launch of two new game-changing laser products, it is important to have a veteran medical device executive like Jim overseeing our most important market. We expect his contributions to our results in the Americas to have a significant positive impact on the achievement of our near and long term corporate objectives. We are pleased to welcome him to the BIOLASE leadership team.”

In 2003, Surek was recruited to join Advanced Bionics as Vice President of Sales for their Neuromodulation/Pain Management Division. In this role, he not only built a 285-member sales organization, but also unseated competitors such as Medtronic and ANS, growing sales from zero to $198 million and market share from zero to 31%.  His efforts were pivotal in positioning Advanced Bionics for successful sale to Boston Scientific. When the Advanced Bionics Cochlear Implant Division was spun off from the company, Surek was asked to serve as Vice President of Sales. In that capacity, he was charged with rapidly advancing the sales culture and training by developing a solid sales and messaging process that helped drive revenue and led to the acquisition of Advanced Bionics by Sonova Medical. 

Prior to Advanced Bionics, Surek held positions of increasing responsibility at Medtronic/Sofamor Danek Group from 1994 to 2003, including Vice President, Sales and Development; Group Director, Sales, Great Lakes Region; and District Area Sales Manager. Surek began his career in sales as a sales representative and, after turning one of the most challenging areas for Sofamor Danek into one of the most successful areas, he became the first direct district sales manager for the company.

 

Surek holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology from Loyola University in Chicago and a Master of International Management degree from the American Graduate School of International Management, Thunderbird Campus.

 

 







Dental Plaque DNA Shows Neanderthals Used 'Aspirin'

Posted on Thursday, March 9, 2017

Ancient DNA found in the dental plaque of Neandertals – our nearest extinct relative – has provided remarkable new insights into their behaviour, diet and evolutionary history, including their use of plant-based medicine to treat pain and illness.

Published this week in the journal Nature, an international team led by the University of Adelaide’s Australian Centre for Ancient DNA (ACAD) and Dental School, with the University of Liverpool in the UK, revealed the complexity of Neandertal behaviour, including dietary differences between Neandertal groups and knowledge of medication.

“Dental plaque traps microorganisms that lived in the mouth and pathogens found in the respiratory and gastrointestinal tract, as well as bits of food stuck in the teeth – preserving the DNA for thousands of years,” says lead author Dr Laura Weyrich, ARC Discovery Early Career Research Fellow with ACAD.

“Genetic analysis of that DNA ‘locked-up’ in plaque, represents a unique window into Neandertal lifestyle – revealing new details of what they ate, what their health was like and how the environment impacted their behavior.”

The international team analysed and compared dental plaque samples from four Neandertals found at the cave sites of Spy in Belgium and El Sidrón in Spain. These four samples range from 42,000 to around 50,000 years old and are the oldest dental plaque ever to be genetically analysed.

“We found that the Neandertals from Spy Cave consumed woolly rhinoceros and European wild sheep, supplemented with wild mushrooms,” says Professor Alan Cooper, Director of ACAD. “Those from El Sidrón Cave on the other hand showed no evidence for meat consumption, but appeared instead to have a largely vegetarian diet, comprising pine nuts, moss, mushrooms and tree bark – showing quite different lifestyles between the two groups.”

“One of the most surprising finds, however, was in a Neandertal from El Sidrón, who suffered from a dental abscess visible on the jawbone. The plaque showed that he also had an intestinal parasite that causes acute diarrhoea, so clearly he was quite sick. He was eating poplar, which contains the pain killer salicylic acid (the active ingredient of aspirin), and we could also detect a natural antibiotic mould (Penicillium) not seen in the other specimens.”

“Apparently, Neandertals possessed a good knowledge of medicinal plants and their various anti-inflammatory and pain-relieving properties, and seem to be self-medicating. The use of antibiotics would be very surprising, as this is more than 40,000 years before we developed penicillin. Certainly our findings contrast markedly with the rather simplistic view of our ancient relatives in popular imagination.”

Neandertals, ancient and modern humans also shared several disease-causing microbes, including the bacteria that cause dental caries and gum disease. The Neandertal plaque allowed reconstruction of the oldest microbial genome yet sequenced - Methanobrevibacter oralis, a commensal that can be associated with gum disease. Remarkably, the genome sequence suggests Neandertals and humans were swapping pathogens as recently as 180,000 years ago, long after the divergence of the two species.

The team also noted how rapidly the oral microbial community has altered in recent history. The composition of the oral bacterial population in Neandertals and both ancient and modern humans correlated closely with the amount of meat in the diet, with the Spanish Neandertals grouping with chimpanzees and our forager ancestors in Africa. In contrast, the Belgian Neandertal bacteria were similar to early hunter gatherers, and quite close to modern humans and early farmers.

“Not only can we now access direct evidence of what our ancestors were eating, but differences in diet and lifestyle also seem to be reflected in the commensal bacteria that lived in the mouths of both Neandertals and modern humans,” says Professor Keith Dobney, from the University of Liverpool.

“Major changes in what we eat have, however, significantly altered the balance of these microbial communities over thousands of years, which in turn continue to have fundamental consequences for our own health and well-being. This extraordinary window on the past is providing us with new ways to explore and understand our evolutionary history through the microorganisms that lived in us and with us.”







German Health Minister Hermann Gröhe to Open Int'l. Dental Show 2017

Posted on Wednesday, March 8, 2017

 

The 37th International Dental Show (IDS) will be opened by Germany's Federal Health Minister Hermann Gröhe on March 21, 2017 in Cologne. This official opening will take place at 10:30 a.m. in the corridor between Halls 10 and 11.

 

"We are delighted that Minister Gröhe is honouring the leading world dental show with his visit, is opening the 37th IDS and is going to gain a personal impression of the performance of the dental medical technology. As such, Minister Gröhe is underlining the high standing of IDS in Germany and abroad," commented Dr. Martin Rickert, Chairman of the Association of the German Dental Industry.

 

IDS is a top event in the Cologne trade fair portfolio and has been growing for years both in terms of the number of exhibitors and visitors. Record figures are expected once again for 2017. 

 







Dental 3D Printers Help Laboratory Launch AAA Aligners

Posted on Wednesday, March 8, 2017

FDC Dental Group of Singapore just announced a new line of clear aligners for orthodontics. Under the brand “AAA Aligners,” FDC has brought its alignment manufacture in house to optimize efficiency through time and cost savings to market a new range of high quality and extremely competitive aligers solution.

The rise in the number of accepted cases in recent years made it clear to FDC that they needed to internalize the process. Previously they’d relied on an external aligner manufacturer for its orthodontic patients,

“With the growing volume in cases, we saw the opportunity to start managing the process ourselves in-house to better control the quality of the aligners and reduce manufacturing cost. We commissioned Structo to supply us with their dental 3D printers and materials, and to set up the entire production line in our facility,” says Dr. N. Aizat, CEO and Group Clinical Director of FDC Dental Group.

“The project with FDC was an exciting one from our perspective because it allowed us to take a holistic look at the entire digital process from scanning to manufacturing,” says Huub van Esbroeck, one of Structo’s founders. “The Structo OrthoForm’s high printing speed and throughput enables businesses like FDC to take control of their own manufacturing process, giving them an edge in the highly competitive orthodontics market.”

By insourcing the manufacturing process, FDC have managed to achieve up to 50% cost savings per patient—savings that are shared by the end users to help made clear aligners more accessible to a broader demographic. Additionally, Structo’s printers also helped FDC manage to halve the turnaround time from 1 month to only 2 weeks upon receiving a case. Faster delivery of aligners to the patient also contributes to AAA Aligners’ edge over its competitors.

“So far, the take-up rate for AAA Aligners has been very encouraging and we will be rolling out the AAA program to all our 21 clinics island-wide,“ claims Dr. Aizat.

“Structo’s mission is to empower businesses like FDC to deliver superior products with the help of digital dentistry and our application-specific solutions. We believe the speed of our printers will allow us to spearhead the widespread adoption of digital dentistry and we are glad we are able to help Dr. Aizat and the entire team at FDC to realize the benefits of a full digital workflow,“ adds Huub.







Young Innovations Donates to Dental Lifeline Network

Posted on Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Young Innovations announced that it has committed $5,000 in support of Dental Lifeline Network’s Every Smile Counts Day campaign.

This inaugural, industry-wide event was held on February, 23 2017 and raised more than $133,000 in support of Dental Lifeline Network’s programs.

Dental Lifeline Network is a national charity that provides free, comprehensive dental treatment to those most vulnerable: the elderly, those with disabilities, or individuals who cannot afford necessary treatment or do not qualify for public aid. The program operates through a volunteer network of more than 15,000 dentists and 3,700 dental laboratories across the United States.

For more information on Dental Lifeline Network. visit https://dentallifeline.org.







Clark Speaks on Bioactivity at Midwinter

Posted on Monday, March 6, 2017

One of the dentistry’s most compelling new subjects was the topic of a press conference before the opening of the exhibit floor at the Chicago Dental Society’s Midwinter Meeting on Thursday, February 23. Larry Clark, Director of Marketing & Clinical Affairs for Pulpdent Corporation, presented “What is Bioactivity Technology and Why is it Important in Dentistry?” for a room full of intrigued dental professionals.

“We are moving past a passive mindset to an active mindset,” Clark said in explaining the emergence of bioactive materials in dentistry.

Dentistry should complement nature rather than fight it, Clark said. The average service length for tooth-colored restorations is only 5.7 years, and replacements of these defective restorations costs approximately $5 billion each year in the US, he said.

New bioactive materials, Clark said, can help because the body notices them and reacts. Sealing the tooth, he said, is the most important goal and instead of looking at products as the answer, dental professionals can look to nature.

“We have been putting materials in the mouth that are rock-hard, and the tooth needs to try to flex around it,” Clark said. “We need to think differently.”

Clark did not mention Pulpdent until the final slide of his presentation.

“This is a challenge for the greater good,” he said. “This is not about market share. This is about doing the right thing.”







Aspen Dental’s MouthMobile Provides Free Dental Care to Vets

Posted on Friday, March 3, 2017

Aspen Dental's MouthMobile fourth annual event kicked off recently in Tampa, Florida, starting its 34-stop journey across the country in support of veterans.

The MouthMobile is Aspen Dental’s 42-foot long dental office on wheels, which travels state to state giving veterans necessary dental care at no cost. Since 2014, Aspen Dental practices across the country have donated over $7.5 million in dentistry and helped more than 12,000 veterans as part of the Healthy Mouth Movement. The Healthy Mouth Movement includes both the MouthMobile and a nationwide Day of Service, when Aspen Dental practices across the country open their doors on a designated Saturday to provide free care to veterans.

“It is an honor to give back to our nation’s veterans, those who have fought for our nation’s safety,” said Dr. Michael Dickerson, a dentist who participated in the Tampa event. “We feel very lucky to be involved with the Healthy Mouth Movement program to help everyone out, and hopefully what we’re doing is making a real difference in these veterans’ lives.”

“Community partners like Aspen Dental instill trust while delivering services that are in demand to our nations heroes and Tampa Crossroads is happy to support the mission of the Healthy Mouth Movement,” said Brian Belcher of Tampa Crossroads. “The saying ‘it takes a village to raise a child’ holds true and at Tampa Crossroads, we often say ‘it takes a village to get a veteran back on their feet.’ We’re proud to have helped provide a needed service to our local veterans here in Tampa.”  

Florida has the third highest veteran population in the nation according to the US Department of Veterans Affairs, and one of the poorest dental health rankings in the country (43 out of 51).

 







ClearCorrect Accepts Dental Wings and Straumann CARES Cases

Posted on Friday, March 3, 2017

Dental Wings announced that ClearCorrect customers will soon be able to submit cases via both Dental Wings and Stramann CARES® intraoral scanners. This offers dentists an easy way to submit cases and means that patients won’t need to make physical impressions. "This is merely the beginning of an exciting collaboration with our colleagues at ClearCorrect,” says Dental Wings CEO Mike Rynerson. 







Recent Headlines

© 2024 Conexiant | Privacy Policy