How to Use the Medit i700 Intraoral Scanner: 6 Pro Tips

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7

  • @angelineli-laing6916
    @angelineli-laing6916 Рік тому +1

    We struggle with saliva . Pt do not want to swallow . We have missing teeth . Pt has a small mouth . What to do

  • @alexandrubogdan2267
    @alexandrubogdan2267 11 місяців тому

    wrong scan strategy and to many arrows

  • @minarostai823
    @minarostai823 8 місяців тому

    I love the fan option, cannot wait for the technology to come up with smaller, less heavy/chunky, cordless, and most important, fast (dentists want you to do a full scan in less than 5minutes: yet they cannot do it themselves!) wand options. The colour is a little off compared to the actual mucosa (as compared to other IO cameras in the market). Can the scanner "add" to cover where the blue arrows are without re-scanning? Still, million times better than alginate!

  • @redmouse6346
    @redmouse6346 Рік тому

    Thank you for this video- we have our 700 for about a year now. You gave them motivation and more confidence to not just put this machine aside and gather dust.

  • @tyevaval6679
    @tyevaval6679 2 роки тому

    Are there suppose to be so many blue arrows if the scan is accurate?

    • @HenryScheinDental
      @HenryScheinDental  2 роки тому

      Hello, ideally there would not be any blue arrows in your scan as the texture of the scan could be off or there could be holes in the model. But depending on what you are scanning for, you can have the software fill major holes or during post-processing clean it up the best it can.
      Please click here below for an educational video by MEDIT explaining the blue arrows: ua-cam.com/video/qk4vVcOSXSI/v-deo.html

    • @cdgofficeemail3374
      @cdgofficeemail3374 Рік тому +1

      Got back and check your alginate impressions and stone models. Pulls, voids, air bubbles, areas that are not 100% accurate to the oral environment. If teeth are wet, the scan requires more angles so as to not be confused by the reflected light. It's trial and error, but considerably better than traditional impressions from a patient perspective. Having digital models also allows for very easy model manipulation and "wax ups" as well as 3D printing applications.