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Dentaltown Learning Online..."Hello Dental Pulp! Accessory Innervation Anesthetic Protocol". By Dr. Daniel Uzbelger

Dentaltown Learning Online..."Hello Dental Pulp! Accessory Innervation Anesthetic Protocol". By Dr. Daniel Uzbelger

12/19/2018 11:30:57 AM   |   Comments: 0   |   Views: 52
Dentaltown is pleased to present...  "Hello Dental Pulp! Accessory Innervation Anesthetic Protocol". By Dr. Daniel Uzbelger.
This CE course can be found here....
https://www.dentaltown.com/onlinece/view/917/hello-dental-pulp-accessory-innervation-anesthetic-protocol





The inferior alveolar nerve block has the highest failure rate not only in dental local anesthesia but also amongst all local anesthetic blocks in medicine. The accessory innervation to the inferior alveolar nerve theory supports that the incidents of unsuccessful anesthesia may result from innervations of the adult mandible arising from the cervical plexus in addition to the auriculotemporal, buccal, mental, incisive, mylohyoid, and lingual nerves. Hence, to achieve profound pulpal anesthesia in the posterior mandible, an accessory innovation anesthetic protocol which anesthetizes all the accessory nerves has been clinically proposed. Three different accessory innervation anesthetic protocol approaches are described in this course as well as how to overcome pulpal anesthesia failure through the intraoral cervical plexus anesthetic technique implementation. This protocol will help alleviate patient’s fear to the dental chair while improving our profession’s reputation.

Dr. Uzbelger Feldman received his Odontologist dental degree (DDS equivalent) from Central University of Venezuela in 1995 and his Post-Graduate Certificate in Endodontics from Carlos J. Bello Hospital in 1997. Since 2003, he has been affiliated to the Department of Endodontology at Temple University Kornberg School of Dentistry (TUKSoD) where he earned his DMD certificate in 2006. By the first time in dental history, one of his research areas of expertise has showed evidence of the cervical plexus nerve implication in dental anesthesia failures and cardiac jaw pain which lead to the development of an improved intraoral cervical plexus anesthetic technique. These efforts have guided to the accessory innervation theory substantiation in dental anesthesia. Currently, he is involved with research activities at TUKSoD in the low-dose dental imaging, accessory innervation in dental anesthesia and endodontic obturation materials fields. With 23 years of experience, he worked five years at the private practice in Philadelphia, PA and now he serves patients in the Cleveland, OH suburbs part-time while working on developing innovative technologies and techniques with a strong focus on public health impact.          
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