Thank you for your helpful lecture. At 6:27 when force is applied to the tooth, it rotates around the center of rotation which is not necessarily the same point as the center of resistance
Thank Mehdi for your comment. What you said is true. A moment just by itself will cause a tooth to spin around its Cres. Here the Crot and Cres coincide. when a force is applied away from the Cres the tooth will translate and rotate at the same time around a point (Crot) away from it Cres. These fundamentals and other principles of tooth movement are discussed in detail www.orthobites.org/csb
We are working on providing a more complete experience with Orthodontic Biomechanics. Please register www.orthobites.org/coming-soon-bio-1, so that we can include you in our future newsletters.
Thank you Haleh. We are in the process of making scientific, research backed videos on Orthodontic Biomechanics. Stay connected. Register at: www.orthobites.org/coming-soon-bio-1 so that you can be included in our future newsletters.
The entire content is not there in any particular textbook. We are working on at our end to make it available. Please register at: www.orthobites.org/coming-soon-bio-1 so that we can include you in our future newsletters.
Hello Dr. Ramesh: Bio-1 (First principles of Orthodontic Biomechanics) is available as an online course at courses.orthobites.org/courses/first-principles or www.orthobites.org/csb Use code 'csborthobites' to get 40% off. For more information email us at csb@orthobites.org
Great lecture
This was a great lecture done by an outstanding lecturer!
at 52:40 May I have the link to the journal?
academic.oup.com/ejo/article/39/2/202/2629573
What a great lecture!
Thank you! The fundamental and clinical applications are discussed in detail with more engaging multimedia at www.orthobites.org/csb
Thank you for your helpful lecture. At 6:27 when force is applied to the tooth, it rotates around the center of rotation which is not necessarily the same point as the center of resistance
Thank Mehdi for your comment. What you said is true. A moment just by itself will cause a tooth to spin around its Cres. Here the Crot and Cres coincide. when a force is applied away from the Cres the tooth will translate and rotate at the same time around a point (Crot) away from it Cres. These fundamentals and other principles of tooth movement are discussed in detail www.orthobites.org/csb
perfect lecture
Thank you Walid!
Pongan subtitulos pues. Para q todos podamos entender
Done. Please check if the subtitles are showing. However, we cannot guarantee the accuracy of the translation. Thank you.
Good one.can I get 2 part
We are working on providing a more complete experience with Orthodontic Biomechanics. Please register www.orthobites.org/coming-soon-bio-1, so that we can include you in our future newsletters.
Perfect🙏🌸
Where can i find or purchase more lectures like this?
Thank you Haleh. We are in the process of making scientific, research backed videos on Orthodontic Biomechanics. Stay connected. Register at: www.orthobites.org/coming-soon-bio-1 so that you can be included in our future newsletters.
@@orkiideh We will get in touch. Our team is working hard to provide state of the art education in biomechanics.
Thank you very much. Can you recommend a textbook of biomechanics ?
The entire content is not there in any particular textbook. We are working on at our end to make it available. Please register at: www.orthobites.org/coming-soon-bio-1 so that we can include you in our future newsletters.
Dr. Madhur - Would you be kind enough to share the link of Biomechanics - 1 as I am unable to find it on UA-cam...
Hello Dr. Ramesh: Bio-1 (First principles of Orthodontic Biomechanics) is available as an online course at courses.orthobites.org/courses/first-principles or www.orthobites.org/csb Use code 'csborthobites' to get 40% off. For more information email us at csb@orthobites.org
best lecture in biomechanics.. thank you very much sir
Sakthi. We are glad you found it interesting!
Please register @t so that we can include you in our future newsletters.
Too confusing
The fundamental and clinical applications are discussed in detail with more engaging multimedia at www.orthobites.org/csb