949-551-1443
For Appointments
Imagine visiting the dentist and leaving your appointment with a
custom restoration in place. With CEREC 3D, short for Chairside
Economical Restoration of Esthetic Ceramics, this is exactly what
can happen. This innovative dental procedure allows a dentist to
economically restore damaged teeth in a single appointment with a
high-quality, durable ceramic material that matches your natural
tooth color. CEREC 3D enables dentists to save as much original
tooth structure as possible and keep their patients gorgeous smiles
in tact.
The Science of CEREC
CEREC
3D uses CAD/CAM (Computer Aided Design/Computer Aided Manufacturing)
technology, incorporating a camera, a computer, and milling machine
in one instrument. First, your damaged tooth is prepared with a thin
layer of reflective powder applied directly on the tooth's surface.
With a special camera, the dentist takes an optical impression of
the damaged tooth, which is transferred to the computer and
displayed on a color screen.
The CEREC Process
Your doctor will use CAD
technology to design the restoration. Then, the CAM takes over and
automatically creates the restoration. Using a high-speed diamond
bur and a disk, the CAM mills the restoration out of a solid block
of ceramic material. Once completed, the dentist will bond the new
restoration to the surface of the old tooth. The whole process takes
approximately one hour.
CEREC AC is short for Chairside Economical
Restoration of Esthetic Ceramics. This dental procedure allows
a dentist to restore damaged teeth in a single appointment, using a
high-quality, durable ceramic material that matches the natural
color of other teeth. CEREC AC provides the ability
to save as much original tooth structure as possible.
CEREC AC uses CAD/CAM (Computer Aided
Design/Computer Aided Manufacturing) technology, which incorporates
a camera, a computer and milling machine in one instrument. First
the damaged tooth is prepared by painting a thin layer of reflective
powder directly on the tooth's surface. The dentist then uses a
special camera to take an optical impression of the damaged tooth.
This optical impression is transferred to the computer and displayed
on a color computer screen, where the dentist uses CAD technology to
design the restoration. Then CAM takes over and automatically
creates the restoration. Using a high-speed diamond bur and a disk,
the CAM mills the restoration out of a solid block of ceramic
material. Once completed, the dentist bonds the new
restoration to the surface of the old tooth. The result is a
beautiful, long-lasting, durable, bio-compatible and conveniently
processed restoration.
| Before |
After |
|
![]() |
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
|
| Dentistry
Courtesy of Dr. James Klim |