Adapt to Deep Pockets

The challenge of manual and dynamic dental equipment is to be able to access and effectively measure all areas of the tooth/root surface. By providing a bird 's-eye view of the pocket, the dental endoscopy has confirmed that all bacterial biofilms and bacteria-preserving calculus must be completely cleared before the inflammation is fully resolved. If left, even small residual stones can cause inflammation in adjacent epithelium.
Probe strength
The most important and effective tool for identifying, obtaining and measuring the deepest and most challenging periodontal bags is the periodontal probe. This straight, thin tool can operate in the most difficult pockets. This exception is a proximal branch when a curved Nabers probe gets better into the II or larger furcations. Curved or reverse ultrasound insertion/tip (Inuit) reaches these furcations more efficiently than the direct tip. The ends of most UITs are thin and straight, mimicking the shape of the periodontal probe. Only a few millimetre of the new person's side surface is the only part that should be used for treatment. This part of the tip has the most movement, making it the most effective. This point, also has the biggest movement, should not be used on the root, because it can cause serious injury. It is sometimes recommended to use heavy, tough calculi deposition, but only if it is in direct contact with the root.
Right position
Magnetostrictive inserts, all 360 ° is active and available treatment. On the piezoelectric strip, only the tip side is effective, because the instrument is linear. This requires more rotation of the instrument to keep the tip of the effective surface suitable for the teeth. It's essentially the same rotation that needs to be adapted to a general surface of the skin, without the Angle of the blade. To adapt to, there will be 90 ° rotating mid differentiated bi-facial or mid - lingual and between the proximal surface treatment.
The parameters in the pocket
According to sales data, the most popular UITs are straight handle configurations. With this in mind, these illustrations and the discussion of the instrument adapter have been used directly, sometimes incorrectly, as the "common" UITs. However, the best method is to use a straight handle in the front area and use reverse UITs in the back area. A future article will discuss UITs using a comparative perspective.
To be treated in periodontal pockets, contact with each part of the root surface is required according to the tip of the newt. The effective stroke of the tip is narrow. The idea of scanning a few inserts in your pocket makes the surface unreal. In the end, good dental supplies need to have an in-depth understanding of the parameters of the pocket and root anatomy, apart from the effective adaptation to the instrument. Fortunately, with an ultrasound machine, you don't have to worry about the blade Angle or create and manage the lateral pressure. To fit the root surface of the periodontal bag, the Inuit are almost always parallel to the long axis of the tooth, just like the positioning of the periodontal probe. As the probe tilts in contact, the Inuit tilt at contact, but don't allow the back of the device to press down on the gums at the Angle of the line.