Search Results -- From our 4,400 pages of dental content X

 

Pictures of Dentistry and Dental Procedures

The thousands of pictures on NYCdentist.com have been created for educational purposes
by Dr. Jeffrey Dorfman, Director of The Center for Special Dentistry.

Telescopic Copings, sleeve coping telescopes for parallelism or cementation

Click on the small photos below to enlarge.
Image Photo Description
Telescopic Copings, telescopes, dental implants, telescopic prosthetic therapy, Yalisove and Dietz Retrofitting a new telescopic coping under a porcelain metal dental bridge. There are many uses for dental telescopes in periodontal prosthesis and full mouth oral rehabilitation. Read Telescopic Prosthetic Dentistry by Yalisove and Dietz.
Telescopic Copings, telescopes,  periodontal prosthesis, telescopic dental implant prosthetics Telescopic Copings are also called telescopes. The coping is cemented with permanent dental cement to the abutment teeth. The dental prosthesis may then be cemented over it with a temporary dental cement. This allows a fixed-removable dental prosthesis without the possibility of recurrent decay.
Telescopic Copings, telescopes,  periodontal prosthesis, telescopic dental implant parallelism Telescopic copings in implant dentistry. Telescopes may be used to create parallelism with dental implants. Some of the dentistry seen in this section may be dated but it is worth keeping online because it demonstrates the many uses of telescopic copings.
Telescopic Copings, telescopes, periodontal prosthesis, Hemisection, Furcation, parallelism Dental crown design for a hemisected mandibular molar that involves a telescopic sleeve coping. 1) Photo of tooth #30 after hemisection. 2) Photo of the crown as seen from below to show a metal furcation and that it looks like two separate premolar crowns. This technique helps protect the tooth while simplifying abutment parallelism.
Subperiosteal dental Implant, Telescopic Coping, Telescope, Fixed-Removable, hybrid parallelism Retrofitting telescopic copings under an all-acrylic prosthesis over a full mandibular subperiosteal dental implant. This implant and prosthesis is over 15 years old. The all-acrylic prosthesis had been successfully retained with a small amount of denture adhesive over the dental implant abutments. The patient would return about twice a year to reline the acrylic of the prosthesis that would wear over time against the dental implant posts. The patient wanted to reduce the frequency of these relines. 1) Full mandibular subperiosteal dental implant. 2) Master model photo. 3) Four dental telescopic sleeve copings were fabricated to fit over the implant posts and had roughened outer surfaces for incorporation into the acrylic prosthesis. 4) The four telescopes on the master cast. 5) The underside of the all-acrylic implant prosthesis. 6) One coping being incorporated into the prosthesis at a time. The acrylic in the immediate area had been removed to allow the prosthesis to seat over the coping, then flowable self-curing acrylic was relined over it. 7) The prosthesis with all four copings attached. 8) An intraoral photo of the implant prosthesis with the telescopic copings attached.
Telescopic Copings, telescopes, sleeve  coping denture, dental Implants,  Subperiosteal, Root form Combination of dental implants. Three unilateral subperiosteal implants (two upper and one lower) that vary in age from 5-16 years, seven anterior osseointegrated dental implants (three upper and four lower) that vary in age from 3-11 years, and one lower posterior molar with a telescopic coping that has remained intact for 16 years. This author personally practiced many years ago with Dr. Leonard Linkow and had first hand experience with many complicated but successful cases like this. In later years this author stopped his involvement with these types of implant cases because mainstream dentistry was headed in a different direction and the neophyte experts didn't understand this kind of implant dentistry. Any serious student of implant dentistry should read the four Linkow textbooks provided for free in the Dental Textbooks section of this website. Leonard Linkow and the men of that era were geniuses.

 

 Information about these dental photos

     In medicine and dentistry "left" and "right" are based upon the orientation of the patient's body and not how they appear in a photograph of a smile.  For example, a reference to the upper left teeth will actually appear to be on the right side when viewing a picture of the face and similarly an upper right tooth will appear to be on the left side.

     Many words in dentistry like oral and mouth have a similar meaning and are frequently used together to help our readers find specific words they best understand.  This is particularly important because a majority of our visitors are from countries where English is not their primary language.  Maxilla or maxillary refer to the upper jaw.  Mandible or mandibular refer to the lower jaw.

     There are many other similar word combinations used throughout this website because our pages are read by patients and dentists.  A few of the most common are discussed here.  Tooth decay, tooth cavity and dental caries all mean the same thing.  Tooth, teeth and dental are also frequently interchanged as in teeth veneers or dental veneer laminate.  Oral rehabilitation and dental reconstruction mean smile makeover.  The word for x-ray may be used with or without a hyphen (this is true for other words too) and can also be called a radiograph.





The Center For Special Dentistry ®      425 Madison Ave - Suite 500 (at 49th Street)      New York, NY 10017      212.758.1000
©2001-2012 1dentist, LLC      1dentist software      Terms and conditions of use      Not an Article 28 facility.
email: mail@nydentist.com