Laser Dentistry: Enhancing Dental Treatment
Laser dentistry can be a precise and effective way to perform many
dental procedures. The potential for it to improve dental
procedures rests in the dentists ability to control power output
and the duration of exposure on the tissue (whether gum or tooth
structure), allowing for treatment of a highly specific area of
focus without damaging surrounding tissues.
If you consider yourself somewhat of an anxious dental patient and
are seeking extreme safety and comfort, you might consider looking
for dentists who have incorporated laser techniques into their
practices and treatments. It is estimated that 6 percent of general
dentists own a laser for soft-tissue applications, with that number
expected to increase over time.
As the applications for dental lasers expand, greater numbers of
dentists will use the technology to provide patients with precision
treatment that may minimize pain and recovery time.
Benefits
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Procedures performed using soft tissue dental lasers may not
require sutures (stitches).
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Certain procedures do not require anesthesia.
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Minimizes bleeding because the high-energy light beam aids in the
clotting (coagulation) of exposed blood vessels, thus inhibiting
blood loss.
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Bacterial infections are minimized because the high-energy beam
sterilizes the area being worked on.
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Damage to surrounding tissue is minimized.
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Wounds heal faster and tissues can be regenerated.
Hard Tissue (Tooth) Procedures
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Cavity
Detector: Low intensity soft tissue dental lasers may
be used for the early detection of cavities by providing a reading
of the by-products produced by tooth decay.
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Dental
Fillings/Tooth Preparation: Hard tissue dental lasers
may eliminate the need for a local anesthetic injection and the
traditional turbine dental drill. Lasers used in dental filling
procedures are capable of killing bacteria located in a cavity,
potentially leading to improved long term tooth restorations.
However, dental lasers are not appropriate for the replacement of
amalgam fillings, onlays or crowns.
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Tooth
Sensitivity: Dental lasers may be used to seal tubules
(located on the root of the tooth) that are responsible for hot and
cold tooth sensitivity.
Soft Tissue (Gum) Procedures
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Crown
Lengthening: Dental lasers can reshape gum tissue (soft
tissue laser) and bone (hard tissue laser) to expose healthier
tooth structure. Referred to as crown lengthening, such reshaping
provides a stronger foundation for the placement of
restorations.
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Gummy
Smile: Dental lasers can reshape gum tissue to expose
healthy tooth structure and improve the appearance of a gummy
smile.
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Muscle
Attachment (Frenula): A laser frenectomy is an ideal
treatment option for children who are tongue tied (restricted or
tight frenulum) and babies unable to breast feed adequately due to
limited tongue movement. A laser frenectomy may also help to
eliminate speech impediments.
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Soft
Tissue Folds (Epulis): Dental lasers may be used for
the painless and suture-free removal of soft tissue folds often
caused by ill-fitting dentures.
Other Applications
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Viewing
Tooth and Gum Tissues: Optical Coherence Tomography is
a safer way to see inside tooth and gums in real time.
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Benign
Tumors: Dental lasers may be used for the painless and
suture-free removal of benign tumors from the gums, palate, sides
of cheeks and lips.
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Cold
Sores: Low intensity dental lasers reduce pain
associated with cold sores and minimize healing time.
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Nerve
Regeneration: Photobiomodulation can be used to
regenerate damaged nerves, blood vessels and scars.
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Sleep
Apnea: In cases where sleep apnea is a result of a
tissue overgrowth in areas of the throat (which sometimes occurs
with age), a laser assisted uvuloplasty or laser assisted uvula
palatoplasty (LAUP) procedure can be performed to reshape the
throat and relieve the correlating breathing problems associated
with sleep apnea.
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Teeth
Whitening: Low intensity soft tissue dental lasers may
be used to speed up the bleaching process associated with teeth
whitening.
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Temporomandibular
Joint Treatment: Dental lasers may be used to quickly
reduce pain and inflammation of the temporomandibular jaw
joint.
Lasers represent an innovative and more precise technology for
specific hard and soft tissue applications. If you choose a laser
dentist, you may find that you feel more comfortable and less
anxiety during your treatments.
The Future of Dental Lasers
Dental procedures may soon be performed quicker, more effectively
and more comfortably thanks to the growing popularity of laser
dentistry. Laser (Light Amplification
by Stimulated Emission
of Radiation)
technology has been used in various types of medical procedures for
years. An increasing number of dental offices around the world will
use dental lasers as the technology continues to improve and its
cost decreases.
Dentists may use dental lasers during a professional dental
cleaning to remove tartar and as a replacement for the traditional
root planing procedure, which is currently performed using a
surgical instrument called a curette that can damage surrounding
tissue. Eventually, dental lasers could make it possible for
dentists to access any part of a tooth, replacing the need for the
traditional dental drill. This may help to relieve the fear and
anxiety many people experience when they go to the dentist.