Keeping A Healthy Smile
Laser Can Find Cavities Early
BOSTON, Updated 6:47 p.m. EDT September
19, 2000 -- Dentists are using a new technology that can detect a weakness
in a tooth before it becomes a cavity. That could mean no more Novocain
shots and no more drills.
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Laser Cavity Detector
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Diagnodent
The device is a compact
diode laser used to identify areas of tooth decay that
traditional means, including X-rays, miss.
Diagnodent shines a laser
beam down into the tooth, to a depth of 2.5 mm.
The device is aimed into
the grooves of teeth, providing a decay reading to the
dentist.
Damian
Blum, D.M.D.
Diagnodent is used by Dr.
Damian Blum.
To schedule an
appointment, call
(410) 465-3224.
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NewsCenter 5's Heather Kahn reports that
Diagnodent is a new laser which finds hard-to-spot areas of tooth decay.
"It puts out a laser beam down into the
tooth, and that light reflects back towards the laser," Dr. Tom Orent of the
Center for Esthetic Dentistry said. "If there's decay, there's a change in
the wavelength. You get a reading from zero to 100 and are able to tell not
only where the decay is, but how deep it is, how much decay there is."
Orent said that regular dental exams and
X-rays can miss as much as three-quarters of decay. One Swiss study showed
that dental exams using a pick detected 57 percent of problems, while
Diagnodent caught 90 percent of decay.
"Certainly we'll see decay if it's large,
but it's too late," Orent said. "At that point, you're looking at a very
difficult restoration, a large filling or in some cases even root canal."
By
catching the decay early, dentists have a number of tools that can get rid
of it, without Novocain or drilling. Other dentists say that more research
is needed before Diagnodent is used in most dental offices, but they do
agree that the technique is an exciting adjunct to X-rays and examination.
"The thing I like about it and is
promising is that it is not invasive," Dr. Fred Boustany of Boston Dental
said. "It provides object measurement of the decay inside the tooth."
That's good enough to keep patient
Rosemary Casey smiling.
"I think it's great, because you want to
keep your teeth as long as you can," Casey said.
Diagnodent is FDA-approved.