Root Elevators 2mm, Luxate Elevators, Periotome Elevators, Bien Elevators Dental Luxator
Root Elevator Dental Luxator 2mm Straight, used as a lever during tooth extraction by pushing it between the gums and the tooth to loosen the tissues around it.
Made of German Stainless Steel Dental Luxator with commitment of a one-year warranty against defects, rust, and corrosion.
Elevator or Dental Luxator are used in dentistry to luxate teeth, which impart forces to tooth particles that sever the periodontal ligament around tooth roots inside the socket and expand alveolar bone around tooth particles.
These effects may result in tooth particle extraction or facilitate systematic forceps extraction of tooth particles. This article discusses basic oral surgery techniques for using elevators to treat luxated teeth.
Understanding the functions of the straight elevator and the Cryer elevator, the concept of purchase points, how the design elements of elevator working end and tips influence the functionality of an elevator, applying forces to tooth particles, sectioning teeth at furcations, and bone removal to facilitate luxation are all required for determining the optimal luxation technique.
The shape and size of the elevator tip, the magnitude and the directions of the forces delivered to the tooth particle by the tip, as well as the sectioning and bone removal inside the working field, all have an impact on how effectively tooth particles are luxated. With a dental operating microscope or binocular surgical loupes telescopes magnified with co-axial illumination, controlled extraction procedures are made easier.
FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions
What role does the dental luxator play?
Dental Luxator Periodontal ligaments are sliced using periotomes. The oral bone and the root are separated from one another using a thin metal blade that is intended to cut off the periodontal ligaments.
How is a tooth luxated for extraction?
When teeth are luxated in dentistry, the stresses applied to the tooth fragments cause the periodontal ligament surrounding the tooth roots inside the socket to rupture and the alveolar bone to enlarge around the tooth fragments.
What is the purpose of a root elevator?
When teeth are luxated in dentistry, the stresses applied to the tooth fragments cause the periodontal ligament surrounding the tooth roots inside the socket to rupture and the alveolar bone to enlarge around the tooth fragments.
Related Product: Cryer Elevators
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