The Power of Layered Digital Records
The dental operatory looks very different than it did a decade ago. Intraoral scanners, CBCT imaging, and digital photography have replaced many of the analog workflows dentists trained on — but are we fully leveraging what these tools can do together?
At our August 2024 seminar, the Colorado Prosthodontic Society welcomed Dr. Seth Atkins to explore exactly that question: how layering digital records creates diagnostic capabilities that simply weren’t possible before, and how those capabilities translate into real efficiency gains at the chair.
Dr. Atkins made a compelling case that the value of digital records isn’t in any single tool — it’s in what happens when you combine them. A CBCT scan overlaid with a digital scan and facial photographs gives you a complete, three-dimensional picture of the patient that no single record type could provide alone.
Layering digital records aids diagnostic capabilities in ways that no single tool can achieve on its own — and it was the throughline of the entire session.
Virtual Articulation: Getting Closer to Reality
One of the most clinically practical elements of the seminar was the deep dive into virtual articulation. Traditional articulators replicate condylar movement in a generalized way — virtual articulation software, fed by accurate digital records, can replicate the patient’s specific anatomy with far greater precision.
For prosthodontic and restorative cases involving full-arch work, occlusal rehabilitation, or implant planning, this means fewer adjustments, better-fitting restorations, and more predictable outcomes.
Additive Manufacturing: From Diagnosis to Delivery
Dr. Atkins introduced workflows using rapid prototyping through additive manufacturing and how in-office 3D printing is changing the speed and accuracy of delivering restorations, surgical guides, and diagnostic models. For practices considering an in-house setup, the session offered a grounded look at where the technology genuinely saves time and where limitations still exist.
Key Takeaways for Colorado Dental Professionals
- Layering CBCT, intraoral scans, and photography dramatically improves diagnostic accuracy
- Virtual articulation replicates patient-specific anatomy more accurately than mechanical articulators
- Additive manufacturing opens new chairside and lab workflows for faster, more precise case delivery
- The ROI on digital systems improves significantly when used systematically, not as isolated tools