Monday, January 28, 2013

Featherstone named dean of UCSF School of Dentistry


Featherstone named dean of UCSF School of Dentistry
By DrBicuspid Staff
September 8, 2008 -- John Featherstone, M.Sc., Ph.D., has been named dean of the School of Dentistry at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF).
In an e-mail message to the campus community on September 5, UCSF Chancellor J. Michael Bishop, M.D., said that Dr. Featherstone, who has been serving as interim dean, would become the next dean pending approval by the UC Board of Regents.
"Dr. Featherstone has been on the UCSF faculty for 13 years, and his exemplary service demonstrates how well-suited he is to serve as the dean on an ongoing basis," Dr. Bishop wrote. "As interim dean, he has demonstrated excellent leadership and management skills, with accomplishments that include selecting and appointing a department chair, establishing the new position of associate dean for clinical affairs as well as restructuring the school administration accordingly, and improving the clinical infrastructure and the financial situation of the predoctoral dental clinics."

Copyright © 2008 DrBicuspid.com

Ultrasonic surgery eases sinus lifts and tooth extractions


Ultrasonic surgery eases sinus lifts and tooth extractions
By Rosemary Frei, MSc, DrBicuspid.com contributing writer
September 8, 2008 -- The use of very high-frequency sound waves -- ultrasound -- isn't just for bats and dolphins anymore. It is the new standard for everything from industrial cleaning to abdominal imaging. And now it's entering the world of dental surgery.
Ultrasonic surgery, also known as piezosurgery, can be used for cutting or grinding bone in sinus lifts, ridge augmentation, bone grafting, bone-block harvesting, and extraction of impacted teeth and roots. The ultrasonic devices developed for dentistry operate at frequencies of 20-35 KHz. The high-frequency sound waves sail right through adjacent soft tissues without damaging them, thus avoiding many of the complications associated with traditional surgical tools such as chisels and burs.
For example, perforation of the Schneiderian membrane occurs about a third of the time when conventional rotary instruments are used to do sinus lifts. But with ultrasound instruments the complication is relatively rare, noted Stephen Wallace, D.D.S., a New York University professor and a periodontist in private practice in Waterbury, CT. He was also one of the first people in the U.S. to perform ultrasonic dental surgery.
"We did a human study and showed the perforation rate is cut by 75%, to just 7%," Dr. Wallace said (International Journal of Periodontics and Restorative Dentistry, September/October 2007, Vol. 27:5, pp. 413-419).
In that study, Dr. Wallace and other periodontists from New York University and Israel pooled the analyses of their consecutive sinus lifting cases using the Piezosurgery device manufactured by Mectron Medical Technology. They noted a total of 7 sinus perforations in 100 procedures -- 3 caused by an extremely thin membrane and the others by the presence of a septum. The perforations all occurred during the hand elevation that followed use of the ultrasonic device, Dr. Wallace noted.
Which ultrasonic system should you buy?
Five ultrasonic surgical systems are now commercially available in the U.S. for cutting or grinding bone in dental applications.
Mectron Medical Technology was one of the first companies to offer this technology to the dental market with its Piezosurgery device. The Piezotome made by Satelec and marketed by Acteon is also available in the U.S., as is the Ultrasonic Bone Surgery device made by Resista and sold by Ace.
Also available are Piezon Master Surgery by Electro Medical Systems (EMS) and VarioSurg made by NSK and sold by Brasseler. Other units currently awaiting 510(k) marketing clearance from the FDA are BioSaf's Easy Surgery and Esacrome's SurgySonic.
The price of these systems ranges from $8,000 to $17,000.
If you are interested in reading what users of these products think about these products and why, check out this forum.
Another study found that using an ultrasonic device to perform bilateral sagittal split osteotomies of the mandible was more time-consuming compared to conventional techniques involving saws, chisels, and burs, but the osteotomies had a higher level of precision. In addition, the ultrasonic procedure offered the advantage of a blood-free surgical field (International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, September 2005, Vol. 34:6, pp. 590-593).
But not all the research has been positive. A recent report from Italy showing a 30.8% membrane-perforation rate in sinus-elevation procedures performed with the Piezosurgery device, versus a 23% perforation rate with conventional instruments (Clinical Oral Implants Research, May 2008, Vol. 19:5, pp. 511-515).
The investigators performed a prelift osteotomy for sinus access in 13 patients using the Piezosurgery system on one side of the maxilla in each patient and rotary diamond burs on the other side. Each side was completed in approximately the same amount of time, but 4 (30.8%) perforations occurred with the Piezosurgery device and 3 (23%) with the conventional instruments.
"It's the only negative report on the Piezosurgery device I've seen in the last 20 years," Dr. Wallace said. "In the program in which I teach residents from around the world how to use these instruments, they're uniformly successful using the Piezosurgery device, even though they're novices. So why there were these complications in the Italian paper, I can't explain."
Dr. Wallace learned how to use the Piezosurgery device about six years ago, at the elbow of one of its inventors, Tomaso Vercellotti, M.D., D.D.S., and he has been training other dentists how to use the technology ever since. He now teaches a two-year fellowship in implant dentistry at New York University that includes instruction in ultrasonic surgery. He also taught a course on ultrasonic surgery in September at the American Academy of Periodontology's annual meeting.
"None of the ultrasonic surgery companies were highlighted at the course at the AAP, but all of them were represented there," he said. "It was like a 'cage match' in wrestling, where people were able to try the five different machines on the same piece of bone. It was an opportunity people never have in their own clinical practices."
Jeff Thomas, D.D.S., a periodontist in private practice in Newbern, NC, is also a proponent of ultrasonic surgery. He just started his fourth year of teaching courses on ultrasonic surgery, and also performs hundreds of procedures with this technology every year in his own practice.
"I can't say I use it every day, but sometimes I use it three or four times in one day; it just depends on the type of surgery I'm doing," he told DrBicuspid.com. "It's not something you have to have. But it's something I couldn't do without. I can do more procedures less traumatically and more predictably than before ultrasonic surgery was invented."

Copyright © 2008 DrBicuspid.com

Zenith donates fluoride varnish to kids' foundation


Zenith donates fluoride varnish to kids' foundation
By DrBicuspid Staff
September 8, 2008 -- Zenith Dental recently donated more than 56,000 units of ClearShield 5% Sodium Fluoride Varnish to the National Children's Oral Health Foundation (NCOHF), the company announced.
The NCOHF is an international organization whose mission is to eliminate pediatric oral disease for millions of economically disadvantaged children. The NCOHF will donate the fluoride varnish to several nonprofit pediatric oral health facilities.
According to the NCOHF, because of Zenith's ongoing support and donations to the organization, the foundation is honoring Zenith with a grant in the company's name that will be awarded to an as-yet-unnamed children's oral health facility.

Copyright © 2008 DrBicuspid.com

Sunday, January 27, 2013

The changing face of dentistry: Part I


The changing face of dentistry: Part I
By Vanessa Richardson
June 23, 2008 -- Ah, the allure of entrepreneurship: Be your own boss. Set your own hours. Make a decent living and help people in need.
Surprisingly, despite dentistry being one of the most attractive small-business ventures around, in recent years there has been a shortage of dentists in the U.S. -- due in large part to a "generation gap" between retiring and incoming dentists, with not enough of the latter to replace the former. But now this trend is shifting, and with it the face of dentistry.
According to the American Dental Education Association (ADEA), the peak year for new dentists was 1983, when 5,756 dental students graduated. In 2005, total graduates only numbered 4,478, a 23% decrease.
"Those nearing retirement age were part of a big surge of graduating students in the mid-1970s to late 1980s, so actually too many dentists were being produced for the need," said Laura Neumann, ADA's senior vice president of education and professional affairs. "Now things have equalized and once again there's an increase in dental school applicants."
In fact, the ADA expects the number of dentists to increase by 8% between now and 2025, with many more women and minorities stepping into the lead role. In 2005, 12,287 students applied to dental school.
There still aren't enough seats for all the dental school applicants. In addition to a decline in the number of dental schools (56 in 2005, down from 60 in the 1980s), the capacity of those schools is restricted, said John Williams, D.D.S., dean at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Dentistry.
"It's not like undergraduate schools where they only need to provide instructors and space," he said. "Huge infrastructure is needed for a new dental school, like labs and clinic spaces. So the small increases we're seeing in dental school enrollment is primarily due to new schools opening up."
But help may be on the way. Three new schools have opened in the past decade, and a new one in Virginia is under way.
The reasons why more people are opting to enter dental school these days vary, but the key seems to be the promise of independence and entrepreneurship. In 2006, when the ADEA polled people about to enter dental school and asked them why they chose that profession, more than 80% listed the top reasons as "ability to control my work time," "self-employment," "income potential," and "service to others."
The values of this generation coincide with dentistry, according to Anne Wells, ADEA's associate executive director for Education Pathways. "They value lifestyle. Income is important but not only the thing; they want control over their practice. It's much more significant to them to develop a meaningful philosophy in life."
Those are the reasons Rhett Raum, a 28-year-old senior at the University of Alabama School of Dentistry in Birmingham and vice president of the American Student Dental Association, went into dentistry. "I have a degree in business management and I used to run a B&B, so I have an entrepreneurial background. What drew me to dentistry was the ability to be a small-business owner, be my own boss, and have financial flexibility."
Raum is an anomaly of sorts, however, because he is purchasing a practice in a small Tennessee town with a population of 4,000. Most dental school graduates are opting to go to urban and suburban areas where there are already plenty of dentists, leaving sizable portions of the U.S. without access to oral care.
"It's less of a shortage and more of a maldistribution," Neumann said. That means dentists in inner cities, rural areas, and small towns who are planning to retire will have a harder time finding their replacements.
Some young people are being lured away from medical school when they hear about equally lucrative and less hectic careers in dentistry. In 2004, general practitioners earned an annual average of $186,000, while specialists averaged $315,000, according to the ADA.
"My physician friends send their kids to dental school because they don't like what's going on with the laws in their industry, whereas the dental industry has not been nearly as encumbered," said Paul Gruber, a 64-year-old dentist in Sheboygan, WI.
Who’s signing up
What will the next generation of dentists look like? In terms of demographics, one population that is taking off is women, who now account for 44% of all dental school graduates and 19% of all dentists, according to the ADEA.
While these numbers are expected to continue to increase, however, another trend is worth noting: a growing number of female dentists will work part time to balance career and family. According to the ADA, 14% of dentists now work part time; this number is expected to reach 19% by 2025, with most being female dentists.
Jack Dillenberg, D.D.S., dean of the University Arizona School of Dentistry & Oral Health, worries about that figure. "Women make up half our class and they are great dentists, but they don't work as long and therefore won't be as productive overall."
But others argue that the flexible hours of dentistry will allow women to be at least as productive as men. That's the opinion of Laura Rammer, a 29-year-old general dentistry student who graduated from Marquette University Dental School in Milwaukee last summer. She mentored with Dr. Gruber in Sheboygan, and is considering taking over his practice when he retires.
"It's now an option for the woman to be a full-time worker and the husband a stay-at-home parent," she said. "I'm going to keep going to the office. Besides, I work four days, from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. That's accommodating for families."
The flexibility of dental work is also attracting many women to become hygienists. The number of dental hygiene programs has steadily increased during the past decade, numbering 270 with 7,200 graduates in 2004. That's nearly twice the amount of dental school graduates -- and the education is half the cost of dental school.
Dental hygiene is the fifth fastest growing profession in the U.S., said Jean Connor, president of the American Dental Hygienists' Association (ADHA). "They are mostly women, often because hygienists stay licensed for their life cycle, so it's good for women who want to have kids and a flexible or part-time career. It's a good-pay salary. And you can be a healthcare professional, but unlike nursing you don't have to work nights or weekends."
Hygienists are expected to be on the front lines of expanding oral care to underserved populations. The ADHA is developing a curriculum to create a master's degree for advanced dental hygiene practitioner. Graduates would be able to do many services a dentist does -- such as cavity prep, extractions, and prescriptions -- and without a dentist's supervision. The goal is to have them serve in lieu of dentists in underserved areas.
"They can be a long arm reaching out to people in need," Connor said. "They'll be important because they can provide dental services and get people on the learning curve of oral health."
Serving the underserved
While the number of female dentists is on the rise, minority enrollment is lagging. More Asians are enrolling, which accounts for the vast majority of minority applicants. However, blacks and Hispanics currently comprise less than 10% of U.S. dentists, far below their numbers in the U.S. population.
This is where targeted minority recruitment of dental students and mentoring can play a key role. The ADEA found that dentists of an ethnic minority background, especially Asians and Hispanics, often chose the career because they wanted to serve their ethnic group or a low-income population in general.
"It's a priority for dental schools as well as for organized dentistry to raise those numbers," Neumann said. "It's a concern about our ability to meet the needs of the public because people want to go to a health provider that comes from their own background and speaks the same language."
In its numerous programs to boost minority representation, the ADEA is working with the Association of American Medical Colleges on the Summer Medical and Dental Education Program that identifies college freshmen and sophomores interested in dentistry and give them a summer-school education.
"This can enhance their chances to do well in both undergrad and dental school," Wells said. Nearly 1,000 students currently participate, along with 12 medical and dental schools.
In part II of this series on the future of dentistry, author Vanessa Richardson tells how dental education is changing, from revised dental school curriculums to targeted recruitment and mentoring.

National Kidney Foundation drops support of fluoridation


National Kidney Foundation drops support of fluoridation
By Rabia Mughal, Contributing Editor
June 20, 2008 -- The ADA lost an ally in the water-fluoridation debate when the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) changed its supportive stance on June 7. The foundation's name has since been removed from the ADA's Fluoridation Facts compendium.
In a recent position paper, the NKF said that it would be prudent to monitor the fluoride intake of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), and that these patients should be made aware of potential risk from fluoride. The NKF also stated that it no longer has a stance on the optimal fluoridation of water.
The NKF's previous paper on fluoridation, released in 1981, maintained that there was insufficient evidence to recommend fluoride-free drinking water for the kidney disease population.
The 1981 paper has been challenged by a lawyer, an academic dentist, and a public health professional (Daniel Stockin,  M.P.H., at the Lillie Center, a Georgia-based public health training firm working to end water fluoridation). They criticized the NKF for adhering to an outdated position on fluoride and ignoring new information, such as a published review by Kidney Health Australia and the National Research Council's (NRC) March 2006 report on fluoridation.
As DrBicuspid.com reported in an earlier article, the NRC concluded that the Environment Protection Agency's current limit (4 mg/L) of fluoride in drinking water should be lowered to protect children from fluorosis, which causes yellowing and pitting of the enamel. In adults, tentative evidence links overexposure to fluoride with bone fracture, damage to the brain and thyroid gland, and mild skeletal fluorosis.
The report also notes that, according to case reports and in vitro and animal studies, exposure to fluoride at concentrations greater than 4 mg/L can irritate the gastrointestinal system, affect renal tissues and function, and alter hepatic and immunologic parameters.
"Such effects are unlikely to be a risk for the average individual exposed to fluoride at 4 mg/L in drinking water," the NRC noted. "However, a potentially susceptible subpopulation comprises individuals with renal impairments who retain more fluoride than healthy people do."
The NKF now says that patients with chronic kidney disease should be made aware of the potential risk of fluoride exposure through information on its Web site. The report also notes that this risk is greatest in areas with naturally high water fluoride levels.
"The oral health of people with CKD is certainly of interest to the NKF, but balancing the overall benefits and risks of fluoride exposure is the primary concern," the organization stated.
Critics of community water fluoridation have hailed this new stance as a minor victory but argue that the statement does not go far enough.
"They issued no press release about this new position and offered no direct link to the information. You have to type in the term 'fluoride' and hit search to find this information," Stockin said.
Stockin has been arguing against community water fluoridation for years.
"When you are going to expose an individual to a chemical like fluoride, you need to understand their health and account for total dosage," he said. "Water fluoridation violates these fundamental principles."
It exposes people of varying health to an unknown amount of a potentially hazardous material, he added.
He admits that fluoride has a small amount of caries prevention ability, but feels that benefit does not balance out the overall health risks.
"The reason that dentists have not stopped using fluoride is because they are too invested in it," Stockin said. "If I were a dentist, I would not touch fluoride with a 10-foot pole."
ADA spokesperson Howard Pollick, B.D.S., M.P.H., a professor at the University of California, San Francisco School of Dentistry, feels there has been no change in the NKF's stance.
"Tap water has not been recommended for dialysis patients since 1981," he said, pointing to one of the recommendations in the new position paper. And they maintain that there is not enough evidence to recommend fluoride-free drinking water, he added.
So why has the NKF removed its name from the ADA fluoride compendium?
"There is legal pressure on them, and this is perhaps a response to that," Dr. Pollick said.
There is overwhelming evidence to prove that fluoridated water reduces dental decay but no evidence to support any health concerns, he added.
According to U.S. Public Health Service guidelines, the optimal water fluoridation level that prevents dental decay without causing dental fluorosis is between 0.7mg/L to 1.2mg/L.
In which case, 4 mg/L sounds fairly high.
"It's the limit," Dr. Pollick explained. "If you go above it, you are at risk for skeletal and dental fluorosis."
Steven M. Levy, D.D.S., M.P.H., agrees. He is the director of the Iowa Fluoride Study, which has tracked the subtle effects of fluoride on 700 Iowa children for the past 16 years.
"Since water fluoridation is the most efficient and cost-effective way to prevent caries, I do strongly believe it is appropriate to encourage expanded community water fluoridation, and that benefits greatly exceed possible risks," he said.
The NKF refused to comment.
"The 1981 NKF position paper on fluoridation is outdated. The paper is withdrawn and will no longer be circulated, effective from the 10/06/07," concludes the new position paper.

OptumHealth Financial Services offers dentists electronic billing


OptumHealth Financial Services offers dentists electronic billing
By DrBicuspid Staff
June 20, 2008 -- OptumHealth Financial Services has added electronic billing to its dental-specific services.
Using the OptumHealth Electronic Payment and Statements feature, dentists can conduct claims payment transactions and receive remittance advice electronically.
"Dental providers and insurers process almost 275 million claims a year using paper methods," the company said in a press release. "OptumHealth Electronic Payments and Statements has the potential to save more than $100 million a year in administrative costs, according to OptumHealth estimates."
"Bringing this capability to the dental industry helps streamline and simplify healthcare finance for everyone in the system -- individuals, employers, dental plans, and dental care providers," said Chad Wilkins, CEO of OptumHealth Financial Services.

Copyright © 2008 DrBicuspid.com

Friday, January 25, 2013

Michigan dental school fights $1.7 million verdict


Michigan dental school fights $1.7 million verdict
By DrBicuspid Staff
December 24, 2008 -- Four faculty members of the University of Michigan School of Dentistry are demanding a new trial in the case of a student who was awarded more than $1 million for unfair dismissal from the school, according to an Associated Press (AP) story.
As previously reported by DrBicuspid.com, Alissa Zwick was awarded $1.7 million this month after a federal jury decided that her due process rights were violated and she was unfairly dismissed from the school in 2005.
She was the victim of infighting between faculty members and the school's associate dean, Marilyn Lantz, D.M.D., Zwick's attorney Deborah Gordon told DrBicuspid.com at the time.
Now the faculty members are asking for a new trial or a reduction in the jury's award, plus $500,000 for emotional distress, the AP reported.
"Lawyers for Lantz and three other defendants -- Drs. Bill Piskorowski, Mark Snyder, and Fred Burgett -- said key rulings on evidence and jury instructions swayed jurors in Zwick's favor," the AP reported.
U.S. District Judge Marianne Battani will hear arguments on February 11.

Man arrested for doing dentistry in his kitchen


Man arrested for doing dentistry in his kitchen
By DrBicuspid Staff
December 24, 2008 -- A Peekskill, NY, man was arrested December 23 for practicing dentistry in his kitchen without a license, according to news reports.
Police said Carlos Flores, 68, a native of Ecuador, had a dentist chair, dental tools, and various medications in his home at the time of his arrest.
They learned of his unauthorized operation after a man who went to him with a toothache wound up in the emergency room of a local hospital, the Lower Hudson Journal News reported.
Flores, who police said claims to have been a licensed orthodontist in Ecuador, was charged with unauthorized practice of a profession and criminal possession of a controlled substance.

U Michigan gets birth defects grant


U Michigan gets birth defects grant
By DrBicuspid Staff
December 24, 2008 -- Dental school graduates can study cleft lips and palates and other craniofacial anomalies at the University of Michigan thanks to a new $750,000 fellowship, according to a report in the Ann Arbor News.
The money comes from the Coghlan Family Foundation, which donated $500,000, and the university itself, which added $250,000 to the fund through U-M President Mary Sue Coleman's Donor Challenge program, the newspaper reported.
"In the state of Michigan, we have about 3,000 children born with a craniofacial anomaly or birth defect," Katherine Kelly, D.D.S., M.S., an adjunct professor, told the newspaper. "We only have 300 orthodontists in the state, and a fair number of those are elderly and retiring and didn't receive this training."
Application submission opens next summer, and the one-year fellowship will be awarded to one dental school resident each year.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Hoya ConBio launches all-tissue erbium laser


Hoya ConBio launches all-tissue erbium laser
By DrBicuspid Staff
November 24, 2008 -- Hoya ConBio has launched the VersaWave Specialty Er:YAG all-tissue dental laser, according to a company press release.
Featuring a wide range of power settings, the VersaWave Specialty allows for treatment of all phases of soft- or hard-tissue dentistry, the company said. The system is designed for general and aesthetic dentists, as well specialists in periodontics, endodontics, prosthodontics, and pediatrics.
The laser will debut at the 2008 Greater New York Dental Meeting later this month.

Dentsply to take majority interest in Italian firm


Dentsply to take majority interest in Italian firm
By DrBicuspid Staff
November 24, 2008 -- Dentsply International has entered into a definitive agreement with the shareholders of Zhermack of Badia Polesine, Italy, to acquire a majority interest (60%) in the European firm, according to the company. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
As part of the agreement, the two founders of Zhermack will retain "significant ownership" and continue to manage the business.
Zhermack is a producer of dental impression materials and lab equipment and sells products in more than 100 countries, with an emphasis on Europe, Latin America, Asia, and the Commonwealth of Independent States. The company has manufacturing facilities in Italy and Poland.
"We believe that our polymer-based expertise can contribute to Dentsply's R&D efforts, and as partners, we can continue developing innovative products for the dental profession," said Tiziano Busin, Zhermack's president and founder, in a press release.

Studies show Nomad portable x-ray system safe


Studies show Nomad portable x-ray system safe
By Kathy Kincade, Editor in Chief
November 14, 2008 -- It may look like something out of a sci-fi movie, but the Nomad portable x-ray system from Aribex is taking the notion of "ray gun" to a whole new level, especially in dentistry.
Introducing CEREC® Omnicam.The most perfect CAD/CAM camera ever
SironaSlim, elegant design for easier intraoral access, fast photorealistic color imaging, and powderless convenience make the new CEREC Omnicam the most precise, easy-to-use CAD/CAM
camera ever.
Five years ago, the idea of a handheld, battery-powered, intraoral x-ray device was little more than that -- a nifty idea. Portable x-ray systems have been around for years, but they can be cumbersome and restrictive. Dentists operating in humanitarian or forensic field situations, for example, need compact, lightweight, and, most important, truly portable instruments -- that is, untethered from wall mounts and wall sockets.
Enter Aribex, a company founded in 2003 to develop new forms of x-ray technologies for medical and industrial applications. Founder and president Clark Turner, Ph.D., says he got the idea for the company's flagship product, the Nomad, from conversations with his dentist.
"I was working on miniature x-ray tubes, and he was going to Russia to do humanitarian work," Turner said in an interview with DrBicuspid.com. "He was intrigued with the idea of mini x-ray tubes and said there was a need for a battery-powered x-ray device in dentistry. Everything at the time was 20 lbs and had to be plugged into the wall and set on a tripod."
By 2005, Turner had produced a prototype of the Nomad, a handheld intraoral x-ray system that looks much like a construction drill but operates like a conventional wall-mounted radiography system. It can accommodate digital sensors or film and utilizes a 14.4-volt nickel-cadmium battery that provides up to 700 exposures on a single charge. The Nomad is designed for general-purpose dental use and is particularly helpful when working with children, sedated patients, or special needs patients. In operation, the technician stands next to the patient, positions the device, and takes the radiograph. This saves time, shortens the time the patient has to sit still with film or a sensor in their mouth, and reduces retakes, according to the company.
The Nomad portable x-ray system by Aribex. All images courtesy of Aribex.
"There are certain procedures where this has a particular advantage, such as endodontic procedures where the practitioner has a drill or file in the tooth and they don't want to move away from the patient," Turner said. "The other really good application is oral surgery, where the rooms are typically too big to make a wall-mount system practical so the oral surgeons use mobile x-ray systems. It was also designed for out-of-office applications; my dentist uses it every Friday at the homeless shelter where he does volunteer work."
Aribex gained FDA clearance for the Nomad in July 2005 and introduced it commercially in 2006, selling for around $7,000. While the device is a little pricier than a wall-mount system, which typically sells for around $4,000, Turner points out that with the Nomad, if you have multiple operatories, you don't need multiple wall-mounted systems. It also eliminates the construction costs associated with reinforcing walls and installing electrical hookups.
"The FDA has a performance standard for intraoral x-ray machines, so as long as you meet these performance standards, it is pretty easy to get approved," Turner said. "It's all about repeatability of the dose and accuracy of the timers. And the FDA regulations don't require it to be mounted on a wall."
Radiation exposure
Unfortunately for Aribex, most state dental boards are stricter in their regulation of dental x-ray systems. The company has spent the last three years going state by state to gain the necessary clearances to allow dentists to use the Nomad. So far 37 have said OK, according to Turner.
The very thing that makes the Nomad so unique -- the ability to have the operator stay in the room, next to the patient, while x-rays are taken -- is also the source of the biggest concern for many state boards: radiation exposure. Thus Aribex has conducted numerous studies to show that the Nomad is safe for users and patients alike, Turner said. Authors of a paper published in Dentomaxillofacial Radiology (February 2008, Vol. 37:2, pp. 109-112), for example, concluded that "Our data have shown that the Nomad presents risks that are no greater than with standard dental radiography units to the patient or operator and the measured doses are well below recommended levels."
The key to making the device safe is the proprietary lead-filled acrylic backscatter shield attached at the end of the cone, Turner said. Radiation studies conducted by Aribex found that in a "worst case" situation -- taking 60 exposures per hour at a maximum exposure of 0.99 seconds each -- an operator has the potential to receive 3.6 mR/hr leakage at the hand. The maximum allowable radiation leakage, per FDA regulations, is 100 mR/hr.
Still, some state dental boards remain unconvinced. In addition, an evaluation of the Nomad conducted by the U.S. Air Force Dental Evaluation and Consultation Service in 2006 noted that "with some patient positions the backscatter shield count not provide the operator with maximum shielding."
"There are some concerns about operator safety, as evidenced by the number of states that have not approved or restrictively approved the use of the Nomad," said Edwin Parks, D.M.D., M.S., the director of dental radiology at the Indiana University School of Dentistry in Indianapolis. "We had a health physicist assess the Nomad for scatter and found minimal exposure to the operator. We sent the information to the state office that deals with radiologic health, and they still chose not to approve the use of the Nomad in the state of Indiana."
Likewise, research conducted by Robert Danforth, D.D.S., an associate professor of radiology at the University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV), and Ed Herschaft, D.D.S., M.A., a professor of biomedical sciences at UNLV, for the radiology section of the state of Nevada found that "when used as shown in the manufacturer's brochures, the protection shield provides appropriate operator protection."
However, if the operator is positioned in an atypical position, a small dose to the reproductive area was detected, Dr. Danforth said. "This is the result of not always being totally within the 'safe zone' of the protection shield," he stated in an e-mail to DrBicuspid.com. "Personnel and patients in adjacent cubicles were not at risk, but assistants/personnel directly involved should not stand within 6 feet of the primary beam pathway." Scatter dose off of the patient and to adjacent areas was negligible at the 6-foot range from the patient's head and generally corresponded to the direction of the primary beam, he added.
Blurring?
The very thing that protects users from radiation exposure -- the lead-based backscatter shield -- also makes the Nomad heavier than some prefer, prompting some speculation about image quality. While customers are generally positive about the handheld, tetherless concept of the Nomad, there have been complaints that, at 8.5 lb, the initial system was tiring to use, according to Turner. The company thus reworked the design -- eliminating the lead lining in the collimator and replacing it with silicon infused with heavy inert nontoxic metals -- and launched a lighter version, the 5.5 lb Nomad Pro, earlier this year.
"My biggest concern regarding the Nomad is the weight of the product," Dr. Parks said. "The new one is a lot lighter than the original model, but it is still heavy if you are taking more than a couple of images. Other than that, I think the Nomad has a number of useful applications for dentistry."
With regard to image quality, Turner said that blurring isn't possible with the short exposure time: 0.2-0.3 seconds. Also, the Nomad uses the smallest focal spot available (0.4 mm), which Turner said further improves the image quality.
Dr. Danforth noted that the image quality can vary depending on what type of film is used. The UNLV dosimetry studies involving digital sensors and F-speed film resulted in image quality "well within [the] acceptable range and not blurred, as some uninformed individuals want to imply," he told DrBicuspid.com. Ultra D-speed film, however, requires a longer exposure and could be subject to some motion artifact, he added.
"In general, I have favorable views concerning the newer version of the Aribex Nomad for use in making a limited number of exposures, such as bitewings and occasional periapicals," Allan Farman, B.D.S., M.B.A., Ph.D., D.Sc., a professor of radiology at the University of Louisville of Kentucky, stated in an e-mail to DrBicuspid.com. "I was not so impressed by the older version, as the battery was quite heavy and use could tire the operator, which in turn could lead to motion unsharpness. The newer version uses much lighter batteries and is a vast improvement."
Dr. Farman also noted that, while the Nomad is well-suited to operative radiology in which the baseline is a digital panoramic radiograph, he does not see the Nomad as a sensible alternative for making the traditional full-mouth intraoral x-ray series as a baseline on new patients or for periodic review.
"However, I am not a protagonist of the full-mouth intraoral survey, given improved image quality with the newer panoramic systems," he added.

Ameritas offers cosmetic dental benefits


Ameritas offers cosmetic dental benefits
By DrBicuspid Staff
November 14, 2008 -- Ameritas Group will now cover professional tooth bleaching and tooth-color composite fillings on molars, the company announced.
"Our bleaching benefit offers upper and lower arch bleaching every two years, in addition to coverage for two types of single-tooth bleaching," stated Karen Gustin, vice president of group marketing and managed care for Ameritas Group, in a press release. "By offering composites on molars, along with the composite coverage we already offer on bicuspids and the smile line, patients can enjoy dental fillings that appear all natural."

Study: Implants need more post-op care than root canals


Study: Implants need more post-op care than root canals
By DrBicuspid Staff
November 13, 2008 -- A new study published in the November issue of the Journal of Endodontics addresses the growing controversy among dental health professionals regarding the best course of treatment when evaluating between a root canal or dental implant procedure, according to a press release from the American Association of Endodontists (AAE).
Researchers evaluated the success and failure rates of teeth treated with a root canal (endodontically treated teeth) or extracted and replaced with a dental implant. While the findings concluded that the success rate of each treatment was similar, the data showed that significantly more dental implants required additional treatment or surgical intervention after the procedure compared to endodontically treated teeth (12.4% versus 1.3%, respectively) (JOE, November 2008, Vol. 34:11, pp. 1302-1305).
"Many dental professionals today are faced with the dilemma of whether root canal treatment or dental implants are the best option for their patients," said lead investigator James Porter Hannahan, D.M.D., of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. "While the success of both procedures is similar, saving the natural tooth through a root canal rarely requires follow-up treatment and generally lasts a lifetime; implants, on the other hand, have more postoperative complications and higher long-term failure rates."
Dr. Hannahan and his colleagues evaluated patient charts of 129 dental implants for an average of 36 months (range, 15-57 months) and of 143 endodontically treated teeth for an average 22 months (range, 18-59 months). Implant data were collected from a periodontic group practice, and root canal data were collected from an endodontic group practice. Researchers placed each procedure into one of three categories: success, uncertain, and failure. Success was defined as radiographic evidence that the implant or treated tooth was still present in the mouth and there were no signs or symptoms requiring intervention during the follow-up treatment period. Failures were defined as the removal of the implant or tooth.
The investigators found two failures of the 129 dental implants for a success rate of 98.4%. They also found only one failure of the 143 endodontic treatments for a success rate of 99.3%. These results were not statistically significant (p = 0.56) with the Fisher exact test, a statistical significance test. However, 12.4% of the dental implants required additional interventions, whereas only 1.3% of the endodontically treated teeth required additional interventions, which was statistically significant (p = 0.0003).
"Considering these results in light of the growing body of evidence on the impact of oral health on overall health, it is imperative for dental professionals to partner with endodontists who have advanced training in examining whether a natural tooth can be saved through root canal treatment," said Dr. Louis Rossman, an endodontist and president of the AAE. "While implants may be an appropriate solution for people with missing teeth, endodontic treatment should be the first choice for restoring a compromised tooth."

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Study questions effectiveness of oral cancer detection devices


Study questions effectiveness of oral cancer detection devices
By Rabia Mughal, Contributing Editor
September 30, 2008 -- Clinicians should rely on oral exams, specialty referrals, and tissue biopsies to best diagnose premalignant and malignant oral lesions because there isn't enough data to prove that adjunctive cancer detection devices are effective in a general practice setting, according to a recent study in the Journal of the American Dental Association(JADA, July 2008, Vol. 138:7, pp. 896-905).
There is an ongoing debate in the dental community about the utility of these devices in the early detection of oral cancer. But the manufacturers of these products stand by them and contend that the JADA study is too limited in its scope.
In the JADA literature review, the authors searched for articles on PubMed, ISI Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library from January 1966 through February 2008 that evaluated the effectiveness of toluidine blue (TB), ViziLite Plus with TBlue, ViziLite, Microlux DL, Orascoptic DK, VELscope, and the OralCDx brush biopsy. Ultimately, they short-listed 23 studies that met their criteria.
In particular, they included studies that reported histologic confirmation of lesions identified by adjunctive techniques, or those that allowed calculation of the test's accuracy compared with tissue biopsy.
The researchers looked at study design, sampling, and characteristics of the study group; interventions and reported lesion diagnostic outcomes; information about the clinical setting (mucosal disease or cancer center clinic or a general practice); and subjects' presumed oral cancer risk.
"We gave each article a summary quality score by means of assessing a priori identified important attributes of the study that may have led to bias in interpretation of results," the authors wrote.
ViziLite Plus with TBlue
The authors looked at three studies that examined ViziLite and reported that its sensitivity was consistently at 100%. However, the authors noted, all three studies involved patients with previously visualized mucosal lesions. The specificity ranged from 0% to 14%. The positive predictive value (PPV) was 18% to 80%, and the negative predictive value (NPV) ranged from 0% to 100%.
No longer available as a standalone device, ViziLite is only available as a kit with blue phenothiazine dye (TBlue). Two studies assessed ViziLite Plus with TBlue.
"The investigators found that ViziLite enhanced visual lesion characteristics in approximately 60% of lesions, identified all lesions previously identified with standard light and identified no additional lesions," the authors wrote. "The addition of TB application to the chemiluminescence enhanced visual examination ... improved the specificity and PPV and increased the NPV to 100%."
Zila Pharmaceuticals, the company that manufactures and markets ViziLite, took exception to some of the study's findings, however. ViziLite's efficacy in identifying suspicious lesions that are missed during visual examination was not accurately reported in the article because the authors used only manuscripts reporting previously identified visual lesions, Mark Bride, D.D.S., Zila's vice president of medical and clinical affairs, told DrBicuspid.
"The ViziLite studies eliminated from consideration were conducted by mucosal disease specialists and thus, per their [the authors] criteria, considered lower quality studies," he noted. "This makes little sense in that the outcomes of those studies demonstrated an improvement in the net yield of lesions suspicious for precancer or cancer with the inclusion of chemiluminescent examination. The article determined that these results are not translatable to a general practitioner in a general screening population. This conclusion is disconcerting and should have no bearing on determining study quality."
Dr. Bride also pointed out that, since Zila's only product is ViziLite Plus with TBlue, reporting on the performance of individual components does not accurately represent the product.
"Unfortunately, by eliminating pertinent studies from the analysis for the purpose of comparing device outcomes to histologic (biopsy) outcomes, ViziLite Plus with TBlue was positioned as a diagnostic tool instead of a screening adjunct," he added.
VELscope
VELscope manufacturer LED Dental also said the study selection does not accurately represent its product.
The JADA study authors looked at two studies that assessed the VELscope. Both involved patients with known oral dysplasia or squamous cell carcinoma (SCCa) confirmed by biopsy.
"Compared with the sensitivity of histopathological examination in patients with identified high-grade dysplastic lesions and SCCa, the reported sensitivities of tissue autofluorescence with the VELscope technology as an adjunct to visual examination were 98% and 100%; specificity was 100% and 78%; PPVs were 100% and 66%; and NPVs were 86% and 100%, respectively," the authors wrote.
The VELscope is useful in assessing lesion margins in patients with oral premalignant and malignant lesions, the authors noted. No studies have been published on its effectiveness as a diagnostic adjunct in lower-risk populations or in patients seen by primary care providers.
"I believe it is a good exercise to see how the various oral cancer screening methods and technologies 'stack up' against this type of rigorous criteria," stated David Morgan, Ph.D., LED Dental's chief science officer, in an e-mail to DrBicuspid. "The bottom line is that none of them compare very well against this type of standard -- and this includes the conventional oral examination itself. Even biopsy with histopathological examination, the gold standard for diagnosis, has significant issues -- sampling problems and subjective rather than objective assessment criteria, which lead to less than ideal inter- and even intrapathologist variability."
Holding newer adjunctive techniques to this kind of standard -- prospective, randomized, controlled, community based multisite studies conducted by nonexpert clinicians on a general, low-risk population -- and recommending that clinicians not to use them because they don't measure up to this standard yet is misguided, he added. The VELscope is not a standalone diagnostic test, he stated.
"It is peculiar that there is concern about using technologies which, when used properly in combination with a conventional exam, help you see more things better, things you might have missed, sometimes things that might save somebody's life," Morgan noted.
OralCDx brush biopsy
The JADA study authors also looked at four studies involving the use of the OralCDx brush biopsy in detecting or diagnosing oral premalignant and malignant lesions. They concluded that, while the test has utility in detecting dysplastic changes in mucosal lesions, there is insufficient data to assess its utility in low-risk populations or clinically innocuous lesions.
Drore Eisen, M.D., D.D.S., medical director of OralCDx Laboratories, said that this finding is "clinically pointless."
"Using the same inclusion criteria that the authors applied to studies of OralCDx, the sensitivity of the scalpel biopsy for testing those nonsuspicious lesions, which are not subjected to scalpel biopsy, is certainly unknown," he said. "For the practicing general dentist, how suspicious an oral lesion may appear matters little, since all white and red tissue changes without a known cause require testing regardless of how suspicious they may appear, and OralCDx offers dentists the only noninvasive and accurate method of testing them."
The study authors stated that, based on the literature, the sensitivity of the OralCDx test varied from 71% to 100%, specificity varied from 27% to 94%, PPV ranged from 38% to 88%, and NPV ranged from 60% to 100%.
But in every comparative study in which the OralCDx brush and scalpel biopsy of a lesion are performed simultaneously and on the same tissue, a very high degree of agreement between these two biopsy techniques is always confirmed, Dr. Eisen said.
"In a recent study of 200 patients with oral leukoplakia, two scalpel biopsies taken of the same lesion agreed with each other only 56% of the time, and underdiagnosis from scalpel biopsy was noted in 29.5% of patients," he said. "Therefore, those studies quoted in the JADA paper, which reported some discrepancies between brush biopsy and scalpel biopsy results, are completely meaningless since in all of those studies the two biopsy samples were obtained by two different examiners and at widely different times."
The authors did not find any studies that met their criteria for the Microlux DL and Orascoptic DK systems.
The authors did not respond to repeated attempts to give them the opportunity to respond to the vendors' comments here.

Study: Dental care can reduce risk of preterm birth


Study: Dental care can reduce risk of preterm birth
By DrBicuspid Staff
October 1, 2008 -- Women who receive dental care before or during their pregnancy have a lower risk of giving birth to a preterm or low-birth-weight baby than pregnant women who don't seek dental care at all, according to a study by Aetna and the Columbia University College of Dental Medicine.
The study, conducted between January 1, 2003, and September 30, 2006, reviewed medical and dental insurance data for 29,000 pregnant women who each had medical and dental coverage with Aetna to determine if there was an association between dental treatment and the likelihood of experiencing either birth outcome.
"Further studies need to be done, but our findings show that dental treatment had a protective effect on adverse birth outcomes in women who sought dental treatment," said David Albert, D.D.S., M.P.H., director of the Division of Community Health at Columbia University College of Dental Medicine, in a press release.
When comparing the group who did not receive any dental treatment to the groups that received gum treatment and dental cleaning, the study found:
  • The preterm birth rate was 11% for those not receiving dental treatment and 6.4% for those receiving treatment.
  • The low birth weight rate was 5.4% for those not receiving dental treatment and 3.6% or lower among the groups receiving treatment.
"The results of this study send a strong message about the importance of dental care for women who want to start a family," said Dr. Mary Lee Conicella, D.M.D., F.A.G.D., national director of clinical operations for Aetna Dental. "We are seeing evidence that supports the role of routine preventive dental care in helping to protect the health of the newborn and the mother, and contributing to lower associated medical costs."
Copyright © 2008 DrBicuspid.com

Mass. dental practices sued by state attorney general


Mass. dental practices sued by state attorney general
By DrBicuspid Staff
October 1, 2008 -- Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley is suing more than a dozen individuals and corporations -- including three dentists and their business managers -- for allegedly exploiting dental patients by performing unnecessary and overpriced procedures to obtain funds from finance companies and insurers.
According to the complaint, filed September 24, the defendants marketed free dental exams and low monthly payment plans to potential customers with "limited means and inadequate or no dental insurance." They then allegedly "baited" them with false and misleading marketing tactics about the defendants' dental practice, promising free exams and affordable monthly payment plans for "quality treatment."
Repeated attempts to contact the defendants and locate their attorneys were unsuccessful.
The complaint states the defendants set up a call center in order to control the alleged deceptive marketing scheme and instructed their employees to lure patients into the dental clinics by emphasizing the free exams. Once the patient was in the chair, the defendants allegedly "switched" them into expensive, hasty, and often incomplete or shoddy treatment, together with costly payment plans. Instead of low monthly payments, the loans carried interest rates as high as 22.98%, the complaint states, and the insurance companies of patients with dental insurance were given false and inflated claims.
"Over and over, the defendants collected thousands of dollars per patient by arranging loans for them from credit companies and billing for the entire proposed procedure up-front, and then left the patients with inadequate and incomplete treatment and costly debt from the credit companies," the complaint states.
When the patient complaints mounted and the scheme became apparent, the defendants allegedly abandoned the patients, their records, and the dental practices. Ultimately, hundreds of patients were left with dental problems and thousands of dollars in debt, according to the complaint.
The attorney general's office says it received more than 200 complaints from individuals claiming they had been injured and overcharged by the defendants, including one patient who was charged $16,126 for "root canals and bridges" that resulted in bruises, swelling, and pain ever since being treated. Another patient reported going into a clinic with a toothache and emerging four hours later with a tooth extraction, root canal, filed-down teeth, a temporary bridge, and a $5,000 credit line with annual interest at 27.99%.
"Many consumers thought they were going for a routine trip to the dentist and left these clinics in worse shape, both physically and financially, than when they walked in the door," Coakley said in a press release. "Our office filed this lawsuit to ensure that these defendants can never again exploit Massachusetts citizens in need of dental care, and we intend to seek relief for the many people already hurt by these unconscionable practices."
In addition to three dental practices -- Spectrum Dental, Coast Dental, and Sierra Dental -- the defendants named in the lawsuit include the following:
  • Gary Anusavice, D.D.S., who "took and maintained a leadership role in creating and operating the defendants' scheme," according to the press release
  • Michael Rinaldi, Joseph Robbio, Vincent O'Neill, and Heather Pavao, all finance advisors and business managers at the dental operations
  • Merhad Haghkerdar, a dentist that facilitated the defendants' scheme at Spectrum Dental
  • William Salisbury, a dentist doing business as Sierra Dental
A temporary restraining order has been issued that secures any assets the defendants may have, prohibits them from applying for or maintaining a license to practice dentistry in Massachusetts, and prohibits them from destroying or altering any records.
Both the attorney general's office and the Board of Registry in Dentistry have previously taken action against Dr. Anusavice and Dr. Salisbury, and both have lost their licenses to practice dentistry in Massachusetts.
Dr. Anusavice was previously accused of stealing thousands of dollars from patients by billing them for services they didn't receive at his Pawtucket, RI, business, Premier Dental. In 1997, he pleaded guilty to healthcare fraud after his DDS Dental Center in Worcester, MA, filed hundreds of thousands of dollars of fraudulent insurance claims and credit card charges, according to the attorney general. In 2005, Rhode Island suspended his license, accusing him of defrauding patients of tens of thousands of dollars through various billing and credit schemes.
Copyright © 2008 DrBicuspid.com

Monday, January 21, 2013

Dentistry and depression: Part II -- How to cope


Dentistry and depression: Part II -- How to cope
By Rochelle Sharpe, DrBicuspid.com contributing writer
August 21, 2008 -- Few of those who attended the spring meeting of the California Dental Association in Anaheim, CA, suspected anything unusual. But while most were in the convention center listening to lectures on topics such as crown lengthening and digital photography, John H. Newman Jr., D.D.S., was losing his battle with depression. On May 2, the opening day of the conference, he leapt to his death from the balcony of his 14th-floor room at the nearby Disneyland Hotel.
Dr. Newman's suicide came as a reminder of the devastating potential of depression -- and the need for dentists to take care of themselves as well as their patients.
"The most important asset in the dental office is the health of the dentist," said James Willey, director of the American Dental Association's Council on Dental Practice, which now sponsors biannual conferences on health and wellness issues.
It's no secret that dentistry can be a stressful profession. Performing technically complicated procedures on anxious patients in a small, confined space can take its toll. Add financial pressures, government regulations, and the threat of malpractice suits, and it's no wonder that dentists have the reputation of committing suicide at a higher rate than any other profession (see part I of this series).
A difficult job
"It's a difficult job that is very demanding -- and people don't appreciate [dentists]," said Dorothea Lack, Ph.D., a San Francisco psychologist who used to work as a dental hygienist. Dentistry is comparable to medical surgery, she said, yet medical surgeons are revered like gods, while dentists are often feared.
Dentists reporting stress
Work is stressful80%
Work stress is moderate69%
Work stress is extreme11.7%
Sometimes have difficulty falling asleep21.4%
Sometimes feel depressed17.8%
Sometimes feel hopeless10.3%
Dentists in counseling6.8%
It is unclear how many dentists are suffering. But in the ADA's 2003 Dentist Well-Being Survey of 2,565 dentists, 80% said their work was stressful. (See chart for more survey results.)
While the pressures may not always be openly discussed, many dentists appear eager to vent about them, if given the opportunity. When Robert Rada, D.D.S., M.B.A, co-authored an article for the Journal of the American Dental Association (June 2004, Vol. 135:6; pp. 788-794) on stress, depression, and burnout, he got more feedback than he has on anything else he ever published. The clinical assistant professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago found himself commiserating with dentists and even trying to give a dentist's wife ideas on how to help her husband cope.
Some dentists get too absorbed by the profession, Dr. Rada said. "Practices that were once simple have gone out of control."
But typically, it's not just work that that drives dentists over the edge, psychologists say. Instead, it's a combination of professional and personal stresses.
To deal with his own stress, Dr. Rada, who maintains a general practice in La Grange, IL, decided to shorten his workweek -- first from six to five days a week, and eventually down to four days. "I cut my hours, kept making as much money, and enjoyed my practice more," he said. Not only did he learn to be more efficient, but he had fewer patients cancel appointments. They knew that his shortened workweek meant that appointments were harder to reschedule.
When dentists are in their offices, they can find plenty of ways to reduce stress, too, experts say. "People don't realize how easy it is to reduce stress simply by breathing," said Uche Odiatu, D.M.D., a Canadian dentist who is also certified as a nutrition specialist and fitness trainer.
When most people are stressed, they hold their breath or take shallow breaths, while depressed people often hunch over or look at the ground, Dr. Odiatu said. Unfortunately, dentists are forced to hunch over for most of the workday, a posture that is not optimal for their mental well-being, he noted.
But it can help to simply take deep breaths and pause to lift your head up, pretending to look out over the horizon, he said. "The brain gets fooled into feeling good."
Dr. Odiatu also advocates exercise, getting enough sleep, and staying hydrated, noting that physiological changes in the body begin when the body is just 1% dehydrated.
When to get help
Depression and suicide resources
ADA
The ADA offers a Web page on health and wellness with links to other resources.
National Suicide Hotlines USA
Offers a list of state hotlines. (National hotlines include 1-800-SUICIDE and 1-800-273-TALK.)
American Association of Suicidology
The organization is dedicated to the understanding and prevention of suicide by promoting research, public awareness, education, and training for professionals and volunteers.
Suicide Prevention Action Network USA
A nonprofit organization dedicated to the creation of an effective national suicide prevention strategy.
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
An organization also dedicated to understanding suicide.
On his Web site, Mark Hillman, Ph.D., a New York psychotherapist, wrote that dentists can use progressive relaxation techniques whenever they feel stressed -- even in the office. By tensing then releasing the muscles, the technique allows muscles to deeply relax, he wrote, inducing a physiological state that is incompatible with anxiety.
Hillman also recommends thought-stopping: concentrating briefly on unwanted thoughts and then emptying your mind of them. By controlling negative thoughts, stress levels can be reduced, he said.
There are productive ways to deal with anger, too, said psychologist Marian Stuart, Ph.D., a professor at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and author of The Fifteen Minute Hour: Practical Therapeutic Intervention in Primary Care, a book on incorporating psychology into healthcare practices.
Instead of dwelling on what is wrong, dentists should think about what it is they want and what they can do about it, she said. If nothing can be done, then they need to try to accept the situation or try to reframe the problem.
Certainly, dentists need to know the warning signs of depression and seek professional help if they are suffering from them. These signs include feelings of worthlessness, decreased ability to concentrate, diminished interest in pleasurable activities, and recurrent thoughts of death or suicide. "When people think about killing themselves, they want to do anything possible to stop the pain," Stuart said.
Her message to overwhelmed dentists: There are better ways out of the anguish.