
3D printing is still considered to be a possible “game changer”: New treatment methods, new forms of team work, new business models. Dentistry is one of the pioneers. The current opportunities for the practice and laboratory are within grasp – at the International Dental Show, 12 to 16 March 2019, in Cologne.According to a current analysis, the worldwide market for 3D printing products in the industry is estimated to grow by between 13% and 23% up to a volume of Euro 22.6 billion by 2030.Specifically in the medical technology sector it is estimated to increase from Euro 0.26 billion (status: 2015) up to Euro 5.59 billion (2030).
According to the estimations of the experts, the development will occur in two phases: primarily the “reinvention” of existing products up until around 2020, then increasingly innovative materials and optimised printing methods. In the industry comparison, 3D printing is experiencing the strongest growth in the medical and dentistry sectors. Hence the dentists, dental technicians and the dental industry are taking on a natural pioneer role.The printing of bases using the laser-controlled method has long since established itself, whereas dental models are made out of plastic for instance. Market researchers see the biggest opportunities for orthodontic appliances, prostheses, crowns, bridges, aligners and models. Wide sections of which have in the meantime become areas of application in the laboratory and practice.
This manufacturing process continually attracts
special attention with spectacular applications. For example, in the
prophylaxis segment an individualised, 3D imprinted dental floss holder is one
of the advanced developments.Vivid images prove effective for the
communications. A digitally modelled smile agreed upon together with the
patient serves here as the template for an imprinted 3D model, this is in turn
used to produce a negative of the patient’s teeth in a silicone key and
ultimately a thin “veneer simulation” of the actual restoration for an initial
aesthetic check in the patient’s mouth.
A robot also managed to implant two 3D imprinted
teeth into a patient’s mouth. And to reproduce the original form of the jaw
after removing oral tumors, the defect can be scanned today and a template
produced using the 3D printing method.This serves to extract a precisely
matching block of bone from another part of the body (i.e. calf) which is
subsequently fitted into the mouth – for the patient this is approx. an eight
hour “all-in-one OP”.Talking about 3D printing in the singular form seems to be
an under exaggeration today – there are namely so many different methods
meanwhile. These include the stereolithography with a precision degree in the
lower two-digit micrometre area, which is suitable for instance for drilled
templates and which can be used for a wide range of resins in the dentistry
sector.
Furthermore, the DLP method is also available: It
excels because it is extremely fast because due to the one-time exposure
(instead of a dancing laser beam) the respective next layer of the object
hardens as quick as lightening. The polyjet method attains an extremely high
degree of precision (16 micrometres). It functions most similarly to the
familiar office printer and doesn’t require support constructions and material
post-processing.From plastic to metal imprints: Here one is familiar with
selective laser melting, selective laser sintering (SLS), direct metal laser
sintering (DMLS) or lasercusing: The crowns, bridges and denture bases
(“digital model casting bases”) are made out of non-precious metal dental
alloys or titanium.
The International Dental Show (IDS) from 12 to 16
March 2019 in Cologne presents the entire spectrum of methods and applications
already implemented today, including the 3D printing of models of all kinds,
from implant masks, drilling templates, casted designs (individual), impression
trays, splints (incl. occlusal splints), from transfer keys, from aligner films
and from long-term temporary restorations made of plastic as well as printing
crown and bridge bases, from bars and denture bases made of alloys. The
suppliers will explain the characteristics of imprintable materials, software
solutions and services appropriate for the practice and laboratory at the
exhibition stands.
“A great deal has become possible in this section
that we wouldn’t have begun to imagine to this extent a few years ago and one
thing is clear today: 3D printing will change the digital process chains
long-term, said Mark Stephen Pace, Chairman of the VDDI (Association of the
German Dental Manufacturers e.V.).
“There are also clinical, technical and economic
opportunities for innovative business models. The chances that arise there for
one’s own practice and one’s own laboratory are demonstrated at the
International Dental Show in Cologne in 2019 more than at any other place.”IDS
(International Dental Show) takes place in Cologne every two years and is
organised by the GFDI Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Dental-Industrie mbH, the
commercial enterprise of the Association of German Dental Manufacturers (VDDI)
and is staged by Koelnmesse GmbH, Cologne.