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OC
04-21-2005, 11:47 AM
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7288

A “robotic” dentist's drill is to be tested on humans in Europe and the US, and could represent the first step towards more automated dental procedures.

The drill, developed by Tactile Technologies, based in Rehovot, Israel, is designed to take the complexity out of dental implant work. It could make operations cheaper, quicker and less painful for patients, its developers claim.

A dental implant is a small metal pin fixed into the jaw to mimic a tooth's root. It is used to anchor replacement teeth and bridges and installing one normally involves complicated and lengthy surgery.

Tactile Technologies has already tested parts of the system on animals and recently received approval from the US Food and Drug Administration to begin trials on humans.

Press of a button

Firstly, a frame is clamped onto a patient's jaw and very thin needles penetrate the gum to determine the location of the bone. This data is wirelessly transmitted to a PC, which combines it with CT scan data to configure a set of drill guides. The guides are then attached to the frame and finally the dentist presses a button to start the drilling in the precise location required.

Once activated the drill is self-guiding but Opher Kinrot, who designed the system, stresses that the practitioner can still alter the drilling process at any time. "The system causes less trauma and brings dental implants to the general practitioner," says Kinrot, who designed the system. "Today it is only done by experts."

And he says this could be just the first step towards more automated dentistry. "In the future maybe something will actually drill for the dentist too," he told New Scientist.

“It sounds like quite a good idea,” says Kevin Seymour, a dental expert at Queen Mary’s School of Medicine and Dentistry in London, UK. The information provided by the probing needles could be very useful, he says, but this might also have a long term impact on the gums: “This soft tissue around an implant is important to its success.”

Tactile Technologies plans to begin trials of the system at several unnamed hospitals in Europe and the US in summer 2005. The entire system is forecast to cost about $1000.

***

Great. In addition to pain and suffering being expensive, it can now be automated. :| /kidding

Showtime
04-21-2005, 11:50 AM
Let me be the 1st.... OH HELL NO!

-j

gear02
04-21-2005, 12:00 PM
Firstly, a frame is clamped onto a patient's jaw and very thin needles penetrate the gum to determine the location of the bone

Screw this! I'm outta here...

TofuNinja
04-21-2005, 12:44 PM
I am with both of you, I ain't going anywhere near that thing..... no spank you

Airencracken
04-21-2005, 12:51 PM
Let me be the 1st.... OH HELL NO!

-j

:stupid: I don't even like human dentists. Can you imagine? It displays "I'm sorry the ROBODRILL has encountered a general default error 34987937sxt please contact MS support" as it drills out your eyes? No thanks.

gear02
04-21-2005, 12:54 PM
:stupid: I don't even like human dentists. Can you imagine? It displays "I'm sorry the ROBODRILL has encountered a general default error 34987937sxt please contact MS support" as it drills out your eyes? No thanks.

haha :heh:

OC
04-21-2005, 12:56 PM
The Tooth Screen of Death. :hihi:

JaQnAbOx
04-21-2005, 01:25 PM
The Tooth Screen of Death. :hihi:
lol

bachviet
04-21-2005, 02:31 PM
Sounds painful so no thanks.

This would drive nickel out of work. :P

welfareloser
04-21-2005, 02:41 PM
Sounds painful so no thanks.

This would drive nickel out of work. :P

no, it wouldn't :P

my first thought at the title was awwww, hellnaw ... but after actually reading the article... if you needed a dental implant, trust me, this is good stuff. getting a good look at the bone with a ct is the part that makes it less traumatic, i think; the robotic bit is nowhere near as important.

and read it again, dudes... a human is right there looking at it the whole time. if it ain't lined up right, it ain't drillin. chill :P

Showtime
04-21-2005, 02:57 PM
and read it again, dudes... a human is right there looking at it the whole time. if it ain't lined up right, it ain't drillin. chill :P

He might be watching closely for the 1st few hundred patients, but after that when it becomes routine and dude is napping or talking on his cell phone.... I can see the headlines... Jaws of Death!!!

-j