Basic Instruments Used by Dentists in Fishers Indiana

Author (ethanpew). Submitted on Mon, 26 Sep 2011

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Like those in other areas, dentists in Fishers Indiana use a variety of instruments to provide quality treatments. This article looks at the basic instruments. Their general features are explored, and some examples are provided.

 

Basic dentist instruments include the mouth mirror and handle, periodontal probe, sickle/contra-angled probe, Nabers probe, Briault probe, and college tweezers and locking tweezers. The general features of such instruments consist of working ends, shanks, and handles. The working ends serve as functional parts, and they can be used for carving, condensing, cutting, packing and placing. Instruments may be single- or double-ended, and their working ends can be cut at an angle.

 

The shanks are between working ends and handles; they can be angled or straight. The shanks’ flexibility is dependent on the function of the instruments. The handles are parts of instruments that dentists grasp, and such parts provide them with control and stability. Handle designs vary according to the function of instruments, and some designs include large handles for better palm grasp and serrated ones for better grip.

 

Dentists in Fishers Indiana use the mouth mirror and handle to obtain indirect vision and reflect light. The instrument can also be used for magnification purposes, and can be employed to protect and retract oral tissues; its variants include single- or double-sided, disposable, and magnifying or plain ones. Conversely, dentists use the periodontal probe to measure the depth of periodontal pockets and reduce the risks of tissue trauma. The periodontal probe can be in plastic form, curved, straight, or at right angles, and single- or double-ended.

 

Dentists in Fishers Indiana employ the Nabers and sickle/contra-angled probes to detect caries, calculus, defective fissures and pits, and deficient margins of crowns, bridges, and restorations. Such instruments are also used for examination—their pointed tips provide good tactile sensitivity—and come in single- or double-ended variants and different styles, and with straight or curved working ends. Differently, dentists use the Briault probe to detect caries on distal and mesial surfaces; its angled working ends enable adaptation to interproximal surfaces.

 

Dentists in Fishers IN utilize college tweezers and locking tweezers to place and hold small objects in the mouth and retrieve similar objects from it. The working ends of such instruments can be curved, serrated, smooth, or straight. This and the previous instruments aid dentists in providing quality treatments to suit individual needs.

 



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If you have questions, please visit us at www.fishersdentist4u.com for complete details and answers.


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