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  2. Minimal intervention dentistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimal_intervention_dentistry

    Minimal intervention (MI) dentistry is a modern dental practice designed around the principal aim of preservation of as much of the natural tooth structure as possible. It uses a disease-centric philosophy that directs attention to first control and management of the disease that causes tooth decay—dental caries—and then to relief of the residual symptoms it has left behind—the decayed ...

  3. Hall Technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hall_Technique

    The technique has been used and found particularly valuable in a developing country with little access to dental services, or resources to support such services. [8] It is also utilized in modern dental practices, as many parents and patients prefer treatment options that are minimally invasive and that help eliminate the need for sedation.

  4. Pulpotomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulpotomy

    Visual of tooth decay. Pulpotomy is a minimally invasive procedure performed in children on a primary tooth with extensive caries but without evidence of root pathology. [1] The minimally invasive, endodontic techniques of vital pulp therapy (VPT) are based on improved understanding of the capacity of pulp tissues to heal and regenerate plus the availability of advanced endodontic materials.

  5. Resin-retained bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resin-retained_bridge

    It is one of many available dental restoration methods which is considered minimally invasive and conservative of tooth tissue. [1] The resin-retained-bridge has gone through a number of iterations. Perhaps the best known is the Maryland bridge and other designs used in the past include the Rochette bridge.

  6. Minimally invasive procedure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimally_invasive_procedure

    Minimally invasive surgery should have less operative trauma, other complications and adverse effects than an equivalent open surgery. It may be more or less expensive (for dental implants, a minimally invasive method reduces the cost of installed implants and shortens the implant-prosthetic rehabilitation time with four–six months [ 9 ] ).

  7. Laser-assisted new attachment procedure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser-assisted_new...

    The use of lasers in treating periodontal disease has been seen by some dental professionals as controversial. [6] The American Academy of Periodontology stated in 1999 that it was "not aware of any randomized blinded controlled longitudinal clinical trials, cohort or longitudinal studies, or case-controlled studies indicating that 'laser excisional new attachment procedure (or Laser ENAP)' or ...

  8. Atraumatic restorative treatment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atraumatic_restorative...

    Minimally invasive, therefore causes less trauma to the teeth and preserve teeth structure; Hand instruments are easily available and less expensive compared to electrically driven dental equipment; Because no "live" dentine is removed and pressure on the dentinal tubules is avoided, local anaesthetic (LA) is not required, reducing ...

  9. Oral mucocele - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_mucocele

    Several types of procedures are available for the surgical removal of mucoceles. These include laser and minimally invasive techniques, which means recovery times are reduced drastically. [8] Micromarsupialization is an alternative procedure to surgical removal. It uses silk sutures in the dome of a cyst to allow new epithelialized drainage ...