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AACD 2012

Is your dentistry Cosmetically Ready?

Visit us at Booth #701 for tips and resources on how to provide optimum patient care and restorations that last the test of time.

Do you know…

  1. The essential relationship between function and esthetics?
  2. How to identify the risk assessment of a case prior to treatment?
  3. How to determine the appropriate incisal display in both horizontal and vertical dimensions?
  4. When minimal or “no prep” restorations are predictable?
  5. What chairside templates are necessary to facilitate conservative and efficient chairside preparation of teeth?
  6. The difference between “temporary restorations” and “prototypes”?
  7. How to make prototype restorations, predictably, efficiently and beautifully?
  8. The 2 key templates created from the prototype restorations that will insure functional predictability?
  9. When it is necessary to utilize centric relation as a treatment position?
  10. The primary reason for ceramic fracture?

 

The answers to these questions don’t have to be a mystery to you. Eliminate questions and solve the mysteries in your dentistry with Drs. Peter Dawson, John Cranham, and Scott Finlay at the 2012 AACD annual scientific session in Washington, D.C.

Join Drs. John Cranham, Peter Dawson, and Scott Finlay on Thursday, May 3, 2012

John Cranham, Pete Dawson, Scott FinlayCourse – L210
Topic – Cosmetic Dentistry Principles

“Timeless Principles in Esthetic Dentistry”
9:15 am – 5:30 pm
CE Units: 6.0L
Course breaks for lunch 12:15 pm to 2:30 pm

This presentation is your gateway to a timeless, proven path of clinical and professional excellence. Dentistry’s contemporary iconic legend, Dr. Peter Dawson, will present ten essential principles that every esthetic dentist and laboratory technician must know to achieve predictable success. Dr. Dawson will explain how to identify dysfunction and how to differentiate those “specialty” cases within your general practice base. Drs. Cranham and Finlay will illustrate how to integrate these principles in a functional, esthetic oriented, restorative practice with a predictable treatment protocol.

Educational Objectives:

1. Learn ten principles every esthetic dentist and laboratory technician must know

2. Understand the essential relationship between function and esthetics to insure predictability

3. Identify, prior to esthetic treatment, which patients pose a risk to future instability

4. Learn how to sequence the four key functional and four esthetic components of every beautiful, functionally correct smile – the gateway to 4×4 treatment planning

5. Transform your vision of a traditional general practice to one thriving with elective esthetic and advanced restorative cases

 Register at AACDconference.com