CAD-CAM single tooth
lithium-disilicate DDS, PhD, MSc Matteo Basso Head of Centre of Minimally Invasive, Aesthetic and Digital Oral Rehabilitation (CROMED), IRCCS Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, Dental Clinic, University of Milan, Italy.
restoration through
combined endodontic,
surgical and prosthetic therapies
DDS Maria Giulia Pulcini Centre of Minimally Invasive, Aesthetic and Digital Oral Rehabilitation (CROMED), IRCCS Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, Dental Clinic, University of Milan, Italy.
Dental student Carlo Vitelli Centre of Minimally Invasive, Aesthetic and Digital Oral Rehabilitation (CROMED), IRCCS Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, Dental Clinic, University of Milan, Italy.
DDS Arturo Dian Centre of Minimally Invasive, Aesthetic and Digital Oral Rehabilitation (CROMED), IRCCS Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, Dental Clinic, University of Milan, Italy.
By Matteo Basso, Maria Giulia Pulcini, Carlo Vitelli, Arturo Dian, Katherine Radaelli and Clotilde Austoni, Italy. The restorative treatment of a severely decayed, unvital tooth requires often an interdisciplinary approach, and the aesthetic and the entity of the masticatory loads are often influencing the choice of procedures and materials. A case of a 45-yearold woman, with an incompletely treated, painful upper premolar is here presented, where the aesthetic needs and functional requirements led the clinician to choose a surgical and prosthetic rehabilitative path, selecting a lithium-disilicate, monolithic block as ideal material for the final restoration.
DDS, MSc student Katherine Radaelli Centre of Minimally Invasive, Aesthetic and Digital Oral Rehabilitation (CROMED), IRCCS Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, Dental Clinic, University of Milan, Italy.
DDS, MSc Clotilde Austoni Head of Centre of Dental Traumatology and Rehabilitation (COIR), IRCCS Galeazzi Orthopaedic Institute, Dental Clinic, University of Milan, Italy. GC get connected
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