Wielding a 3-D scanner that looked like a bulky electric toothbrush, dentist Randy Raetz spent a few minutes in a patient’s mouth one morning last week, getting three-dimensional images of a set of front teeth, the opposing arch, and how they fit together in a bite. Then, while the patient sat back in the Brighton, N.Y., practice’s dental chair and tapped away on his laptop, Raetz tweaked some of the imagery on a computer screen before sending the data to a mill sitting feet away.
3-D technology becoming common in dental offices
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– January 17, 2015