A dental technician, dental technician, or dental technician [1] (in English: Dental technician) is a member of the dental team, and works in a laboratory for the dental industry to create alternative teeth for patients (prosthodontics) according to descriptions and standards at the request of the dentist, and among these compensations: Bridges, implants, and dentures.[2][3][4] The dental technician produces these dentures by mechanical manual labor using special machines and tools.
Dental technician
US Navy 040325-N-1045B-007 Dental Technician 1st Class Robert Rhodes, of Detroit, Mich., shapes a mold for a temporary partial in the Dental Department aboard USS George Washington (CVN 73).jpg
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The dental technician must have studied an academic study that qualifies him to work in this profession. This study includes knowledge of medical information related to the mouth, teeth, anatomy of the head and neck, and various prosthodontics. It also permeates practical education in private laboratories that trains students to create prosthodontics.
A dental technologist (dental laboratory technician) is a member of a dental team who, based on a dentist’s prescription, builds custom appliances and appliances for dentistry.[5][6]
There are four major specializations in dental technology. These are fixed dental tools that include crowns, bridges, and dental implants; Removable denture tools, including full teeth dentures and partial dentures; Oral and Maxillofacial Dental Prostheses Include Ocular Prostheses and Craniofacial Prostheses; And orthodontics and its accessories, which includes orthodontic appliances and mouth guards.
The dentist communicates with the dental technologist through prescriptions, drawings, and measurements taken from the patient. The most important aspect of all this is the impression of the teeth into which the dental gypsum is cast to obtain an exact replica of the patient’s anatomy which is known as the dental cast. The technologist can then use this template to manufacture the required teeth.