RE: [ACEsthetics] Endo so skip if not interested

That is exactly what I am going to do.  I'm buying it myself.  We'll see about the ozone.  The light will go in the room I'm in but I'm considering buying the new Orascoptic glasses with the light and batteries rather than the cord that drives me nuts. 

 

Guy W. Moorman, Jr., D.D.S.

The Swamp

Douglas, GA 31533

912-384-7400

 

 

 

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From: William Domb [mailto:wmdomb@verizon.net]
Sent: Monday, April 01, 2013 12:12 PM
To: Guy Moorman; riccoker@gmail.com
Cc: 'Ace'
Subject: Re: [ACEsthetics] Endo so skip if not interested

 

If I were an associate and determined that I needed some equipment that my Owner wouldn't purchase, I'd consider getting it myself.

 

It's like recognizing you are ALLOWED to purchase your own dental procedures even if they're not covered by your magnanimous dental plan.

 

regards

bill domb

 

Sent: Monday, April 01, 2013 3:42 AM

Cc: 'Ace'

Subject: RE: [ACEsthetics] Endo so skip if not interested

 

Well, even if I was waiting for a machine to come on the market that my partners would accept, I'm only an associate now and the senior partner has taken the stance the less people we employee (bad mistake) and the less we buy (bad mistake) the more money he'll make.  I'm going to make my 35% no matter what.  They are not buying and ozone machine.

 

Guy W. Moorman, Jr., D.D.S.

The Swamp

Douglas, GA 31533

912-384-7400

 

 

 

This email message and any attached files are confidential and are intended solely for the use of the addressee(s) named above.  This communication may contain material protected by patient rights, work product, or other privileges.  If you are not an intended recipient, you have received this communication in error and any review, use, dissemination, forwarding, printing, copying, or other distribution of this email message and any attached files is strictly prohibited.  If you have received the confidential message in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply email message and permanently delete the original message. 

 

From: acesthetics@googlegroups.com [mailto:acesthetics@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of William Domb
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2013 12:12 PM
To: Guy Moorman; riccoker@gmail.com
Cc: 'Ace'
Subject: Re: [ACEsthetics] Endo so skip if not interested

 

Interspersed some comments.

 

regards

bill domb

 

The problem would be removing debris not in the main radicular canal but I wonder at the importance of this if you totally disinfect it. 

 

Disinfection is only half the battle.  Maybe LESS than half.  The necrotic debris and bacterial/viral/fungal remnants that percolate into the dentinal tubules may be more important to the owner of the tooth, since they penetrate the entire tubule structure system, they're immunostimulatory and leech back out into the surrounding tissues and thence to the rest of the body.

 

David is also right for those of us using resin sealers.  Any oxygen producing agent destroys the ability of the resin sealer to set, thus a failure. 

 

Maybe, but has not been observed by those using ozone in reality.  Probably because it reacts so rapidly that it disappears as a reactive entity before you get your sealer mixed.

 

  If there was an effective delivery system I'd probably go to ozone and use gutta percha and ZOE. 

 

Define effective delivery system.  Real easy to put some gas in a syringe and then use a cannula to squirt it into a canal.  Or put the cannula directly on a hose coming from the generator and let the gas flow in the canal.  HealOzone even makes a kooky cannula system to go on their handpieces, but simply suctioning in the general vicinity of the tooth grabs all the gas we're pumping in. 

 

No need for the difficult-to-seal HealOzone paraphernalia.  Flow rate from the generator's around a 32nd liter per minute and is completely dwarfed by the uptake rate of even a saliva ejector, let alone the HVE.

 

Gas inhalation is simply not an issue.

 

 

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