From manual to additive: streamlining dental impressions.
January 26, 2022
Reducing material costs of partial dentures with 3D printing.
Market advancement requires an advanced lab.
Udell Dental Laboratory (Udell), a full-service dental
lab, has been providing high-quality restorations and
services to dentists for more than 60 years. With
demand increasing for accurate appliances fast, Udell
realized traditional methods were no longer helping
them uphold their long tradition of excellence.
The time required to print a typical removable partial dental frame is reduced by 80 percent, which makes it possible to complete the partial denture framework in a day and a half.
Scott Udell, president, Udell Dental Laboratory
Traditional methods slow down production.
For Udell, using the traditional manual approach to
make removable partial denture frames (RPD) took
many steps and was not efficient enough to meet
increasing demand. The traditional process required
96 minutes of work by a dental technician and was
highly dependent on their skill and attentiveness to
ensure an accurate fit.
Using an impression taken by a dentist of the
patient’s mouth, a skilled technician pours the stone
model and then duplicates it into a refractory model
that becomes part of the mold used to cast the
metal RPD framework. The technician designs a
wax pattern to the refractory model that defines the
geometry of the RPD and fills in undercuts in the
gums to provide a smooth path for RPD placement.
Sprues are attached to the wax pattern and
refractory model, and the assembly is placed in
an investment ring.
Silica casting investment is
poured into the ring to create a mold for investment
casting. Molten metal is cast into the mold through
the sprues, replacing the wax pattern. When the
metal cools, the refractory and silica investment are
removed to reveal the finished frame.
A complete model, like this frame with the support material intact, takes
only 65 minutes via the digital method, compared to two days with
traditional methods.Udell Dental Laboratory can 3D print models like this in clear bio-compatible material
Dental lab reduces material cost by 80%.
Several years ago, Udell switched to digital technology to make RPDs, shaving 20 minutes off this step compared to traditional approach. This faster approach begins with taking a 3D laser scan of the stone model. The technician works with special software to define the geometry of the frame. The software provides automated tools to ensure an accurate fit, such as automatically calculating the path of insertion for the RPDs and highlighting any interference. This approach reduces the time required for this step from 20 minutes with the traditional approach to one minute.
The technician uses a 3D printer to create an RPD pattern for investment casting. The pattern is sprued, invested, cast and finished the same as the traditional method. This digital method takes only 65 minutes to produce a complete RPD. The new method saves the dentist additional time in fitting the RPD because its accuracy is much higher. If a remake is required, modifications
can be quickly made to the digital file and reprinted
instead of having to hand wax again from scratch.
The 3D printer that Udell first used required material
that cost averaged $12 for each RPD pattern and took
12 hours to print the pattern. Turnaround time was
three days. Looking to improve these numbers, Udell
decided to compare the Stratasys line of 3D printers
against its current system.
Scott Udell, president of Udell Dental Laboratory,
said that the Objet Eden260V Dental Advantage 3D printer “offers major advantages over the 3D printer
that we used in the past.” The bio-compatible material
used by the Dental Advantage averages $2.84 per
RPD, which is less than 25 percent of the cost per
frame from the company’s previous 3D printer.
“We also print denture try-ins and models for night
guards. Our total material savings are about $3,500 per
month.”
Finished parts, like this polished alloy frame, have higher accuracy using the
digital method.