Tuesday, June 30, 2026

VELscope Mantis has Arrived - the Latest Light Aided Oral Cancer Screening Device

 


Here is some big news.  Starting today the VELscope Mantis is available for purchase.  I was notified about this recently and thought I'd let you all know the day it was available for ordering.

Today's post will cover details on  the newest device from VELscope to help provide state of the art oral cancer screening.  However, before I get to the new Mantis, I want to spend a little bit of time explaining why I think using a special light to help with oral cancer screening is such a great idea.

For years now I've had a big interest in oral cancer.  It's one of those problems that I feel oral health professionals should do all we can to help find at it's earliest stages.  I've used light assisted means for performing oral cancer screenings for at least the last 20 years and I wouldn't practice without it.  

Areas of concern can be difficult to identify using only white light.  Oral cancers can appear in many colors and they can be very difficult to see.  A doctor often sees a small discrepancy and has to run through a diagnostic checklist in their mind.  "Is that area whiter than normal?  Is that purple area a little bit darker than the surrounding purple tissue?"  That's just a small example of what is taken into consideration.

The advantage to using light assisted screening is that when viewed under a certain wavelength of light and with the proper filter used by the device, areas of concern appear black to the clinician.  This makes areas of concern much easier to identify.

In the simplest terms, injured tissues in the mouth are much easier to identify under certain wavelengths of light.  I tell my patients that the light is not a diagnostic device, it's a screening device.  I explain that it doesn't tell me if they have cancer, but it does tell me if there is any area of their mouth that is in some way traumatized.  The trauma could be from an accidental cheek bite, a burn, or any other type of injury.

The light allows me to better evaluate things.  If an area I notice might be due to trauma, an exam two weeks later will look different as it is healing.  If it looks the same or more injured, I then refer to an expert.  Patients appreciate the extra care a light assisted exam provides.

If found at an early stage, oral cancers can be dealt with, but unfortunately when discovered in their late stages, five year survival rates are extremely low.  Also, even if the patient survives, late stage cancer surgeries can be disfiguring.  Those are just two of the reasons I'm such a proponent of light assisted screening.

Now, let's get to the info about the new Mantis from VELscope.

The new VELscope Mantis is named after the mantis shrimp, a creature with one of the most advanced visual systems in nature, capable of detecting ultraviolet, infrared, and polarized light beyond human perception. Inspired by its namesake, the Mantis enhances fluorescence visualization, empowering dental professionals to identify oral abnormalities earlier with exceptional clarity, precision, and depth.

The device has a rotating wheel that allows the operator to quickly and easily switch between lighting modes.  

Mantis integrates three visualization modes into one device.

  • Traditional white light - Non-polarized white light visualization is the traditional method for examining tissue, providing a combination of surface reflections that highlight texture and topography, along with color variations that indicate the state of the underlying tissue.
  • Polarized white light - Polarized white light visualization excels at showing subtle colour tissue changes by improving colour response and eliminating surface reflections than can be distracting and obscure underlying tissue
  • Enhanced fluorescence visualization - The new VELscope Mantis builds upon its predecessors by increasing field of view and enhancing filtering for a brighter, improved image with increased yellow/orange spectral content.
For the best documentation, photos should be used and the new VELscope Mantis makes taking those photos incredibly easy.  

The device has been designed so that the user can attach an iPhone or iPod into the device and use the camera to take clear and crisp photos.  To make the photo process even easier, the Mantis can be paired with the photo taking device via Bluetooth.  The handle on the Mantis has a trigger button that can activate the camera.  The operator gets the area clearly into the frame, pushes the button on the Mantis device, and the iPhone or iPod takes the image.  Those photos can then be downloaded and stored in the patient's digital chart as part of the permanent patient record.  These images can then be used to compare at a follow-up appointment, if needed.  They can also be sent to an office if the patient needs to be seen for further diagnostic procedures or surgery.  This gives the doctor providing further treatment images of the area as it appeared initially and at further appointments from the referring office.

Mantis also comes with Cloud storage for the images via  SOTA Cloud.  While it's a nice way to backup the images, the service does require a subscription.  The first month is free, but after that there is a monthly charge.  You can find out more about the SOTA Cloud storage with this link.  

Light assisted screenings can save lives.  The scientific literature on light assisted screening is pretty clear on the advantages.  There are several devices on the market and I highly recommend getting and using one.  Your patients will appreciate the effort and will be grateful for the extra care you provide.  At the end of the day, caring for our patients in the number one goal of our profession.  Light assisted screenings is a great way to do that.


Monday, June 29, 2026

Could AI Erode Diagnostic Skills?

 


Since I'm The Technology Evangelist, it goes without saying that I am a confirmed gadget guy and tech lover.  iIve always been a lover of gadgets, even before I went into dentistry, and throughout my career I've always tried to evaluate and incorporate technologies that made sense into my clinical practice.

However, I've always tried to look at things as objectively as possible.  By that, I mean I always make an attempt to see the potential pluses and minuses that come with any tech that can affect patient outcomes.  

Along those lines I'm a big believer in AI.  For radiographic interpretation I like the concept of an objective third party that can help give you to find something you might not have noticed or to help a doctor consider that an area they notice might not need treatment.  When it comes to AI in the administrative part of dentistry, I'm hopeful that by being able to offload some of the more mundane tasks to machines, it will allow the front office staff to have more real patient interactions.  As we all know, dentistry is a relationship based profession and the more we can foster those relationships the better.

Yet, we always need to consider both the benefits and to potential detractors that come with incorporating new technologies and today's post is focused on that.

When I was in dental school, much of the first two years were devoted to sciences such as histology, microbiology, and biochemistry.  The hands-on classes often seemed to focus on things that, at the time, I felt were teaching me things I'd never use.  Things like pouring models or creating wax patterns and casting them weren't' things  that any dentist I knew actually did.  They were done by people that worked for the dentist (dental assistants and dental lab technicians) and I often wondered why I had to learn to do those jobs.

Obviously I was young and headstrong then because once I actually began to practice I quickly realized how knowing those things were the foundation on which I lot of what I did was built.  If I hadn't been taught those skills, I would have been less able to understand and do what I was doing.

Since that revelation, which happened pretty early on, I've always supported schools to continue to teach those things.  Even if you never plan on ever taking an physical analog impression, I feel that knowing the principles of it, makes you better at scanning.

Although the rest of this post is not specifically related to dentistry, I thought this was a topic worthy of bringing up here.  I recently became aware of a study done in Poland that attempted to compare physician's diagnostic skills before and after having access to AI systems designed to help in identifying pathologies.  The concept was to find experienced clinicians who knew what they were doing, see how they performed with AI assisting them, and then see how they performed without the help of AI.

The results were interesting.  Of course this is only ONE study and much more science needs to be done on this aspect of things before we draw conclusions, but the results do give everyone in healthcare something to be aware of and consider as AI becomes more and more integrated into our clinical workflows.

The study evaluated if clinician's diagnostic skills could atrophy after beginning to rely on AI.  The study followed physicians performing endoscopic procedures.  Each physician had performed at least 2000 colonoscopies during their careers.

The study covered nine months.  For the first three months doctors worked without AI and the number of precancerous areas was totaled.  For the next three months they used AI that analyzed the imaging in real time that flagged for the precancerous condition.  The AI tool was randomly available and unavailable to compare results during those three months.  The doctors never knew when they would be able to use AI.  The final three months were again done with no AI and the results totaled.

At the conclusion of the study, the data was analyzed.  It showed that in the three months before AI 28.4% of colonoscopies found at least one precancerous area.  In the three months after AI the number of precancerous areas noted was 22.4%.

Do the numbers indicate the skills of the doctors declined or did working with AI help them not have as many false positives?  I didn't see anything which mentioned that in the article I read about the study.  What I came away with was the belief that this needs a lot more study.  There's a lot of concern about AI in the world and we need to understand its impact much, much better.

I am not a statistician and I'm not a specialist in colonoscopies, but I find the results intriguing at the very least.  Obviously a lot more research into this needs to be done before drawing any conclusions.  I'd like to tie thing together now.  I feel that learning and really understanding the basics of a subject is the foundation you need to grow toward being an expert.  That applies to everything in life, just like my need to know how to properly pour an impression as a student.  This is also why I feel that AI is a tool.  These systems are currently designed to be data gathering systems.  They should not be making decisions.  Instead, they should be viewed as a colleague who nudges you and says, "what about this spot?"

Healthcare diagnosis is a complicated subject that frequently requires a nuanced decision based on many factors.  However as my friend Dr. Marty Jablow says about AI "don't check your brain at the door".  That's a great statement that I agree with.

The study was published in The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology in October 2025.  I happened to come across a summary of it on Nature.com 

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Coming Full Circle in 3D - Why Recycling Should be Part of 3D Printing and how DRNA is Making that Happen

I remember the first time I saw a dental 3D printer.  It was at the ADA meeting in Washington, D.C.  The year was 2015.  Back then as a die hard technology lover I knew that 3D printing existed and I understood the concept, but I understood very little else.

I was wandering the exhibit hall of the meeting, (which is one of the things I try to do at dental conventions), when I happened to see a booth that was displaying a 3D printer.  Like a moth to a flame, this super cool tech drew me into the booth and before long I was engaged in a conversation with one of the company's representatives.

I was shown dentures, transitional partials, and (I think) maybe even a surgical guide.  I was fascinated and mightily impressed.  The things I saw looked incredible and they fit on their corresponding models perfectly.  I learned the overall process and asked questions about resins.

This led me to the big question I had.  “How do you come up with a design for these things?” I asked.  The representative opened a laptop and showed me the design software the company had used.  Back in 2015, 3D printing was just starting to creep into the dental industry and there was no dental specific design system.  Instead I was shown software that was used for engineering design.  The screen looked like the cockpit of a 747.  I walked out of the booth and I knew that, while amazing, this tech would never make much progress in the industry unless the design process was fast and easy.  Dentists don’t have the time to spend 45 minutes designing something, they need to devote that time to treating patients.

Fast forward to 2026 and I’m happy to say things have changed a lot since that day in 2015.  In the 11 years since that meeting, 3D printing has seen considerable growth in offices.  I think the principal reason for that growth is in how much the design process has changed.  As AI continues to make rapid inroads into the dental industry, one of the areas that has been impacted the most is 3D design.

The design process has gone from a detailed and time consuming task that required a degree in engineering, to a process that frequently only requires the user to upload an intraoral scan and then click “next” until the project is ready to print.  The design process has always been the bottleneck in the use of 3D printing in the dental office and those design barriers are falling fast.

Dentistry is poised at the edge of a dramatic technological shift and the market is about to reflect that.  I predict in the next five years we will see a large change in how a great deal of dentistry is delivered.  What we’ll see is that the simple, everyday things are going to move to being fabricated in-office.  Things such as splints, occlusal guards, retainers, and surgical guides can now be easily printed, but more importantly they can also be easily designed.  

That means that as dental offices seek to deliver care faster and with lower costs, more and more offices will begin utilizing 3D printers.  This will allow offices to lower their lab costs on “bread and butter” cases while still delivering the precision the profession demands.

Many dental labs have already embraced 3D printing for a variety of applications.  That means that many doctors are already delivering 3D printed things to their patients so they already have confidence in the technology.  It’s only a small step to bring this into the dental office.

However, there’s one area that needs to be addressed.  Our world is dealing with an excess amount of plastics in our environment and as offices move into this realm, we need to do our part to help ensure the health of the planet we call home.

I’ll use my experience with my coffee maker as an example.  I’ve been a diehard coffee lover since my college days and that, of course, means I own a coffee maker for my home.  I’m not sure who invented the coffee pod, but whoever it was should have been awarded the Nobel prize for convenience.  I don’t think twice about dropping a pod into my machine and cranking out a steaming cup of dark roast.  Well, I should say I didn’t think twice about it… until one day when I did.  

One morning as I was placing an empty milk jug into the recycle bin it suddenly occurred to me that every coffee pod I was using was headed straight to the landfill.  I’m embarrassed that I hadn’t thought of it before that day, but when I realized how much plastic I was personally putting into the trash, I made the effort to search Amazon for a coffee pod I could buy that could be recycled.  That led me to a company that makes compostable pods and I’ve been using them ever since.  In a similar way that dentistry has moved to using amalgam separators to keep mercury out of the environment, we need to make a similar approach to recycling 3D printed scrap.

For those of you unfamiliar with the 3D printing process let me explain.  The resins used in 3D printing are liquid.  These resins are photo-polymerized by the printer in a manner that is similar to how doctors place composite resins.  The printing resins are cured in layers.  Because they are liquid and polymerized in layers, the printer software creates little bars of plastic under the printed project as it is created to keep it in the correct shape.  These bars are called “supports” and they are a necessary part of the 3D printing process.  To clarify, here's a screenshot of an occlusal guard in the design software.  You can clearly see the supports.


When the project is completed and fully cured, a human then removes the supports and polishes the completed printed project.  This process of removing the supports and polishing is easy and doesn’t take much time.  However the cured resin supports now need to be disposed of.  That means that every printed project is creating a certain amount of waste.

Now add to that the idea of “pods”.  We’re now seeing printers for dentistry that create small projects like crowns and veneers through the Keurig® concept of single use, resin filled pods.  These pods make printing incredibly easy, but in addition to the supports, the pods themselves are also made of plastic and need to be disposed of properly.

As more and more offices move into 3D printing, the amount of waste that will be generated from this amazing technology is going to be significant.  So what can dentistry do to properly and ethically deal with this problem that is looming on the horizon?

Just like my empty gallon bottle of milk, dentistry needs to recycle these leftovers.  Of course if you want to recycle plastics you’ll come across a problem.  Not all plastics are the same.  My gallon milk bottle is recycled by my local trash collector.  My plastic grocery bags need to be returned to the grocery store for proper recycling.  Printed 3D resins also require a specific recycling process and they cannot be disposed of in just any recycling bin.  

Fortunately there is a simple answer.  For over 25 years DRNA (Dental Recycling North America) has been in the business of helping dentistry properly dispose of waste.  The company provides amalgam separators, sharps disposal, and disposal of pharmaceuticals as some of its services. This year DRNA has launched a new effort that allows dentistry to recycle the waste from 3D printers.

It’s an incredibly easy solution, so allow me to explain how it works.  DRNA sends the dental office a shipping container.  Inside is a 2.5 gallon bucket with a liner and a return shipping label.  The liner is placed inside the bucket.  Any 3D printer waste, whether it is cured supports, resin pods, or empty resin bottles, is simply placed in the bucket.  When the bucket is full, the office places the bucket into the shipping container, attaches the label, and notifies DRNA.  The company ships a new 2.5 gallon bucket kit to the office while the office ships the full bucket back to DRNA.  The DRNA solution meets federal, state, and local hazard waste regulations, is an easy one-step process, and provides full documentation.  The entire process is  so easy, even I can follow the instructions!  

After integrating new technologies into my workflows over my entire career, here is my suggestion to the 3D printing companies.  Human beings are creatures of habit.  Once we learn a process for completing a task, we tend to follow the same process time after time.  This is especially true in dental offices which are incredibly procedure driven.  When making a change by incorporating a new workflow, it is much easier to make all the changes at once as opposed to developing a system and then making changes to it later.  Recycling with 3D printing needs to be a part of the office workflow from the very first day.  Partnering with DRNA and training the office that recycling is part of the process with their very first 3D printed project will ensure a smooth integration right from the start.  Let’s provide patients with the best solutions possible and do what’s right for planet Earth.  As an industry, we’re all in this together.  

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Mid America Dental Sales Launches Watchdog for Wireless Sensor Tracking


Wireless sensors can be a blessing and a curse.  The blessings are:  they are easy to move and they don't require USB connections which can wear out over time.  The curse can be:  easy to move = easy to lose.

Let's face it, the cord makes it much more difficult to get the sensor folded up in a patient bib and tossed in the trash at the end of an appointment.  However, today's post might bring all of the concerns to an end.  Here's news about a way to wirelessly track your wireless sensors and even know if they've been out of their charger for longer than expected.

Mid America Dental Sales Launches Watchdog — RealTime X-ray Sensor Tracking for the DCAir Wireless Direct Conversion X-ray Sensor by FTG

Mid America Dental Sales has announced the nationwide release of Watchdog, a new realtime tracking and performance monitoring platform designed to protect and optimize the 4th generation DCAir Wireless Direct Conversion Sensor.

Watchdog provides instant system tray alerts the moment a sensor leaves its dock or isn’t returned, identifying the sensor, the room, and its last known location. While misplaced, or accidentally discarded sensors are relatively uncommon, concern about losing a wireless sensor is one of the most frequent questions practices have when transitioning from a corded sensor to a wireless sensor. Watchdog was specifically designed to eliminate that concern by proactively tracking each sensor’s location and status helping practices prevent loss before it occurs and providing greater confidence when adopting wireless technology.

DCAir Watchdog: Smart Tracking. Total Peace of Mind.

  • Instant alerts when sensors are not returned to their charger in a pre-set number of minutes. 
  • Pinpoint exact location via Bluetooth finder.
  • Live dashboard showing every sensor and room location 

Paired with the DCAir sensor’s Direct Conversion technology — which captures photons directly for sharper, more detailed radiographs — Watchdog creates a complete imaging ecosystem that enhances clinical confidence and protects the practice’s investment.

Watchdog and the 4th generation DCAir Wireless Direct Conversion Sensor are available now through Mid America Dental Sales’ nationwide dealer network.

For more information, contact your local fullservice dental dealer or visit www.dentalsalesinc.com


Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Some Interesting Facts Regarding AI in Usage in Large Corporatons



AI is making inroads everywhere and probably nowhere as quickly as "big business".  Large corporations are always looking to increase efficiency while at the same time cutting costs.  Although I like to say that everything in life is a "yin & yang".  You can't have a left without a right and you can't have an up without a down.  Along those lines, while I'm a big fan of AI, I'll be the first to admit that there should be a "human in the loop".

What excites me about AI in dentistry is the hope that as more of the mundane time intensive tasks are offloaded to AI, that will free up the people in the office to have more time to have face to face interactions with patients.  Dentistry is a relationship business and those face to face interactions and conversations help build trust and confidence with patients.

The environment of large corporations is a completely different thing.  That's especially true when you factor in a remote work force.  Tracking employee work from remote locations can be difficult for some large companies and that becomes even more so as these large companies try to deploy AI agents across multiple departments and multiple parts of their workforce.  I recently found some interesting numbers & suggestions from TRG Datacenters and I think what they have is interesting.  It doesn't probably apply to dentistry, but might at some point in the future.  Personally I feel we learn a whole lot more from our mistakes than we do from our successes.  I also think it pays to analyze the mistakes of others so that we can learn from them and not repeat them.  At some point some of these things may very well apply to the profession.  If nothing else, the info below makes for an interesting read.


As issues from AI implementations affect even larger companies like Air Canada and McDonald’s, more and more businesses are rethinking the value AI agents bring to their projects. Over 60% of remote-capable employees are implementing AI tools in their processes now, and experts at data infrastructure provider TRG Datacenters looked at academic studies, industry reports, and verified corporate incidents and legal cases to outline key issues and risk management solutions. 

Here’s their breakdown of six key areas where artificial intelligence causes the highest risks:

1. The Rise of Shadow AI Use Leads To Millions in Losses

Key issues: As 67% of the UK’s organizations report not being able to track what employees are sharing with artificial intelligence, security breaches like copypasting client data into ChatGPT and software developers sharing internal code with AI agents are becoming more common.

Measures to take: Financial experts suggest that shadow AI breaches cost $670K more on average compared to regular security issues. To avoid additional losses, it’s important to install both IT and security oversight over AI interactions. 

2. Over-Permissioning AI Agents Can Wipe Your Entire Database

Key issues: To speed up AI involvement, many companies do not limit which databases, codes, and workflows it has access to. The high-profile cases of this problem include the deletion of entire production databases and backups by Claude-powered AI agents.

Measures to take: The AI-usage skills can be easily developed, but they require education. In addition to learning materials, every team engaged with AI needs to know not to treat AI as another colleague.  

3. AI Hallucination Rate Still Sits At 40%

Key issues: No LLM tool yet can fully avoid hallucinations, and the current estimations for false information are around 40%. Incorrect information provided by AI has already been spotted in the Air Canada chatbot and even in McDonald’s AI-driven drive-through, which brought both money losses and lawsuits for these companies. 

Measures to take: Human oversight is a key part of AI processes. No product can go straight from artificial intelligence without a specialist checking the data first. AI chatbots are the tools that need to be verified the most, as they currently show the highest unchecked hallucination rate.

4. Deepfakes & Impersonations Hit Much Harder Because of AI

Key issues: Involving AI in internal processes also puts companies at a greater risk of impersonations and deepfakes. The high-profile cases included an AI-cloned video call and an Italian government voice scam.

Measures to take: Educate employees on how to identify misinformation and scams. Staying updated on the latest tools to combat deepfakes is increasingly valuable, too. 

5. Algorithmic Bias & Discrimination Find Their Way In HR Decisions

Key issues: AI tools have the same biases as the data they were trained on, and AI inclusion in HR processes can harm both the company and the team. AI resume screenings favor white-associated names in 8 in 10 cases.

Measures to take: The training material for AI agents needs to be checked first, especially on the issues of fairness and representative data. Human oversight is needed, too, and no final decision regarding employee management should be left solely on AI.     

6. It’s Hard To Decide Who’s Responsible When AI Is Involved

Key issues: Only 23% of organizations which use AI rate themselves as highly prepared for artificial intelligence risk management and are not able to deal with accountability issues.

Measures to take: Conduct audits and keep data logs to track AI-related decisions. Looking out for current and new legal frameworks that governments put in place can also help contextualize AI work processes. 

AI experts at TRG Datacenters conclude:

“A lot of companies are asking staff to 'use AI more,’ but they are not giving them practical rules for what that means. That leaves workers guessing whether they can paste in meeting notes, client emails, contracts, or code. Employees are being pushed into AI adoption faster than leadership is building guardrails.”

Monday, June 22, 2026

Rodin® Chroma Flash™ Light Cure Box is Now Available

One of the most critical pieces of 3D printing is the post-cure system.  When a normal project comes out of the printer, it is washed in isopropyl alcohol to remove the excess resin, and then it is placed in the post-cure unit to give it a final cure.  This part of the process is critical.

The printing process cures the resin enough to harden it, but it is not completely polymerized at that point.  The final full polymerization and long chain formation comes from that good final cure in the post-curing unit.

That importance is the reason for today's post.  If you know a bit about dental 3D printing, you probably know Rodin, the line of 3D printing resins created by PacDent.  I happen to be a fan of the Rodin product line and I was excited last year when PacDent announced their plans to bring out an entire line of 3D printing hardware.  This hardware will be an open system, which means that the system will be able to use most of the resins on the market, but will be fine tuned for the Rodin line of resins.

To compliment this new line of hardware, PacDent decided to manufacture a new state of the art post-curing system.  That new state of the art post-cure is the Rodin® Chroma Flash™ and it's available now!   According to the company:

The Rodin® Chroma Flash™ is a nitrogen-free flash post-curing system engineered for consistent, reliable polymerization of 3D printed dental resins. Delivering uniform curing in minutes, it enhances mechanical properties, surface quality, and workflow efficiency without the need for nitrogen setups.

One of the biggest things that makes this unit different is the flash lamps.  Most post-cure units currently available accomplish their task thru the use of LEDs.  While LEDs certainly will do the job, the intensity of flash lamps makes a big difference.  The unit has xenon flash / stroboscopic light sources that emit from 280-950nm wavelength.  The intensity of the flash lamps provides a deep and full cure.

One of the post-curing systems that I use on a routine basis is the Otoflash unit.  It also uses flash lamps and I have been incredibly happy with the cure that those flash lamps provide.  The other great thing about the flash lamps in the Rodin® Chroma Flash™is that those flash lamps are optimized for Rodin resins which are nano-hybrid ceramic filled resins.  That means that if you are currently using Rodin resins, this unit will provide you with the best cure possible.  However, it's also been engineered for use with other manufacturer's resins and printers as well. 

The lamps provide uniform energy delivery across all the surfaces of the printed projects which means the end result is the strongest possible.  That translates to better stability, conversion, and flexural strength.  Also, because a flash lamp is incredibly intense, the post-cure process is faster.  

I should be receiving a unit soon and will report back on my experience with it.  However, as you can probably tell, I'm pretty optimistic about the results I'll get.  However, like always, I'll put it through the paces and objectively evaluate the results.  I'll report back here on my experience.  


Thursday, June 18, 2026

Promising DMG Treatment for MIH Presented at AAPD 2026


 

Leading MIH researcher presents treatment being used successfully in Europe

A standing-room-only audience at the recent annual conference of the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry in Las Vegas was treated to an illuminating and encouraging presentation about the documented ability of DMG Icon® resin infiltration to treat Molar-Incisor Hypomineralization, or MIH. The presentation was given by Dr. Katrin Bekes, Professor and Head of Pediatric Dentistry at the Medical University of Vienna. Dr. Bekes is a world-renowned expert on MIH and a long-time supporter of the efforts of DMG researchers to find an effective and efficient treatment for a disease that afflicts one-in-seven children worldwide.

Icon is already indicated for use as an MIH treatment in the European Union and other countries.  DMG is currently working to secure the Federal Drug Administration’s clearance for Icon as an indication for MIH, as well as for trauma and enamel porosities, in the United States.  The AAPD 2026 conference afforded DMG an opportunity to increase awareness of several new Icon protocols, including transillumination, bleaching pre-treatment with 3D-printed bleaching trays for discolored opacities, micro- or air-abrasion for tougher and deeper lesions, and extended infiltration time. Dr. Carla Cohn, Dr. Bilyana Daskalova, Dr. Alyssa Delgado also gave lectures about their use of Icon for various approved indications. It also allowed the company to make pediatric dentists aware that Icon may soon be indicated for treatment of MIH.

However, as Dr. Bekes pointed out, treating MIH requires a totally different approach from treating carious lesions and white spot lesions. The condition is sometimes referred to as “chalky teeth” due to yellowish/brownish discoloration, large opacities, unstable molar structure, and enamel defects such as decavitation. Little is currently known about the multivariate causes of MIH, in part because the disease starts to build in the teeth years before it is diagnosed. But what is known that the condition can cause hypersensitivity and even chronic pain to children.  And, according to Dr. Bekes, an even more damaging effect can be the psychological trauma and embarrassment caused by teasing peers that lead some children with MIH to avoid smiling or speaking.

DMG researchers in Germany recently announced the first evidence-based, validated treatment concept for MIH lesions worldwide. The treatment protocol, developed by the DMG clinical research team in collaboration with Dr. Bekes and other leading MIH experts, offers a minimally invasive approach that removes discoloration and stabilizes the teeth. As Dr. Bekes explained, the first step in the protocol is bleaching to remove the brown discoloration composed of proteins. While bleaching agents for whitening purposes are not widely approved for use with children, DMG’s Flairesse Bleaching Gel is approved for use in the pediatric treatment of MIH in many countries due to its status as a medical device approved for the treatment of enamel opacities. (It will be launched as a 510K-exempt Class I medical device in the U.S. in the second half of 2026.) The bleaching takes place at home using DMG bleaching trays specially designed to prevent the bleaching agent from coming into contact with the gingiva. Once this step is completed, the teeth are conditioned and ready for the application of the Icon Caries Infiltrant in the dental practice. The protocol’s outcomes have been very well received by practitioners, patients and parents alike.

"With one in seven children globally impacted by MIH, it’s no wonder MIH was one of the hottest topics at AAPD 2026,” said John Scott, Clinical Affairs Director at DMG America. “In fact, because Dr. Bekes’s talk drew so many attendees, the AAPD has asked us to submit a proposal for a follow-up presentation on treating MIH on the main stage of AAPD 2027.”  For more about bleaching and MIH, visit https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jerd.70056.

For more about transillumination and MIH, visit

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ipd.70064.

About DMG

DMG manufactures and distributes a full range of market-leading dental materials and equipment that are internationally recognized for their quality and innovation. Known for its breakthrough dental technology – including flagship products like Luxatemp® and LuxaCore® Z Dual, the revolutionary Icon® caries infiltrant, LuxaCrown® long-term crown and bridge material, and new additions such as Ecosite restorative composites, and DentaMile® 3D printing solution, complete with software, hardware and resins – DMG is committed to helping provide holistic solutions and streamlined workflows for dental and lab professionals to meet their needs through innovation, collaboration, and dedication. 

For more information about DMG products, or to find a sales representative, please visit online at www.dmg-america.com, or call 800-662-6383.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Dr. Brian Novy Joins Personify Group Advisory Board, Reinforcing the Firm’s Commitment to Prevention, Oral-Systemic Health, and the Future of Evidence-Based Dentistry

Nationally Recognized Cariology Leader to Help Advance Strategic Initiatives Focused on Disease Prevention, Value-Based Care, and Medical-Dental Integration

Personify Group, a strategic branding, communications, and commercialization advisory firm serving the dental and oral health industries, announced today that Dr. Brian Novy, one of the profession's most respected authorities on cariology, preventive dentistry, and evidence-based oral healthcare, has been named the company’s Cariology and Preventive Dentistry Advisor.

The appointment reflects Personify Group's growing commitment to supporting organizations that are redefining oral healthcare through prevention, disease management, oral-systemic health awareness, and healthcare innovation. Dr. Novy's expertise will help guide the firm's work at the intersection of science, clinical practice, patient outcomes, and commercialization.

Widely regarded as one of dentistry's leading voices in caries management and disease prevention, Dr. Novy also serves as president of the National CAMBRA Coalition and holds faculty appointments at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine and other leading institutions. He has served on the American Dental Association Council on Scientific Affairs and as a consumer representative to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Dental Products Panel.  Throughout his career, Dr. Novy has been a leading advocate for transforming dentistry from a procedure-centered model into one focused on disease prevention, risk assessment, and long-term health outcomes. His influence extends across academia, private practice, organized dentistry, industry, and public health, helping clinicians and healthcare organizations adopt evidence-based strategies that preserve natural tooth structure and improve patient wellness.

"For decades, dentistry has excelled at repairing the consequences of disease. Dr. Novy's work has been focused on preventing disease before irreversible damage occurs,” said Michael Ventriello, Co-Founder and Chief Communications Officer of Personify Group. “His leadership in preventive dentistry aligns perfectly with our vision of helping innovative organizations improve both oral health and overall health outcomes."

According to Mark Ross, Co-Founder and Chief Branding Officer of Personify Group, "The future of dentistry will be defined by prevention, personalization, and integration within the broader healthcare ecosystem. Dr. Novy’s perspective will help ensure that the companies, technologies, and thought leaders we support are contributing to meaningful improvements in patient health while advancing the profession itself."

Dr. Novy said he was attracted to Personify Group's commitment to helping innovative organizations communicate scientific advancements in ways that create meaningful impact.

"I believe the future belongs to organizations that can effectively communicate evidence-based solutions and help accelerate the adoption of preventive care models,” said Dr. Novy. Personify Group understands the importance of bridging science, education, innovation, and communication, and I'm excited to contribute to that mission."

Dr. Novy's appointment is part of Personify Group's broader effort to assemble a  multidisciplinary advisory team capable of helping clients navigate some of the most significant and complex trends shaping healthcare today, including preventive dentistry, oral-systemic health, minimally invasive treatment approaches, healthcare consumerism, artificial intelligence, and medical-dental integration.

About Personify Group

Personify Group is a strategic branding, communications, and commercialization advisory firm serving the dental and oral health industries. The firm partners with emerging innovators, established manufacturers, healthcare organizations, and industry leaders to accelerate market adoption, strengthen thought leadership, and build brands that advance the future of oral healthcare.

Guided by a growing network of clinical, scientific, and business advisors, Personify Group is particularly focused on helping organizations champion prevention, oral-systemic health, evidence-based care, early caries solutions, and innovations that improve patient outcomes while strengthening the connection between dentistry and overall healthcare.



Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Pearl and Seattle Study Club Partner to Advance AI Education in Dentistry


My office began using Pearl's radiographic system Second Opinion in January 2023 and have never looked back.  Starting back in 2016 I had been working with a few different companies that were developing radiographic AI platforms and I was pretty quickly convinced of their value in clinical dentistry.  Those early systems were clunky and required the user to jump through several hoops before actually seeing the AI interpretation, but even with all of the steps they required, the value was obvious.  

I still remember the disappointment I felt when the first company I was working with ran out of funds and had to cease operations.  Even though it took several steps to get a bitewing into their system, I had grown to depend on it.  The confidence of having an objective third party helping me to evaluate radiographs was powerful.  I didn't want to go back to the "old way".  Fortunately a week or two later I was approached by another startup and began helping them in product development.  Now as I look back at how far we've come, it's amazing.

Today's post is about a recent announcement from Pearl and the Seattle Study Club.  They are partnering to help deliver cutting edge info to the profession.  The details of the partnership are below.

New partnership will expand clinician access to practical AI education designed to help practices improve care delivery, patient communication, operational efficiency, and financial predictability

Pearl, the global leader in dental AI solutions, today announced a strategic partnership with Seattle Study Club, one of the nation’s most respected dental education networks, to help accelerate clinician education around the practical application of AI across the modern dental practice. As a Gold Tier partner, Pearl will collaborate with Seattle Study Club through educational programming, conference participation, and clinical content initiatives designed to help dentists understand not only what AI can do, but how to deploy it effectively throughout the dental workflow from examinations and patient communication to scheduling, documentation, insurance workflows, and practice operations.

The partnership reflects a shared belief between the organizations: that the future of dentistry will not be defined by technology alone, but by how effectively clinicians are educated on how to integrate new technologies into patient care.

While AI adoption in dentistry continues to accelerate, many practices still lack practical guidance around implementation, workflow integration, and clinical best practices. Pearl and Seattle Study Club aim to close that gap by providing educational experiences grounded in real-world application, clinical excellence, and operational outcomes.

“At Seattle Study Club, we believe exceptional dentistry starts with continuous learning,” said Gary Dickenson, CEO of Seattle Study Club. “AI is becoming an increasingly important part of modern practice, dentistry needs meaningful education around how these technologies support better care, stronger patient communication, and more efficient practice operations. Pearl brings both the technological leadership and the practical perspective to help make that education valuable for our members.”

Originally recognized for pioneering real-time AI radiologic analysis in dentistry, Pearl has evolved into a broader AI platform designed to reduce friction across the dental workflow. Today, Pearl’s technologies support clinical decision-making, patient understanding, imaging quality assurance, insurance preparation, documentation workflows, operational intelligence, and other systems that help practices operate more consistently and predictably.

By embedding AI directly into everyday workflows, Pearl helps practices improve diagnostic confidence, standardize communication, reduce administrative burden, and create a more connected experience for both clinicians and patients.

“Dentistry reaches its highest standard when great clinicians are equipped with both powerful tools and the education to use them well,” said Ophir Tanz. “Seattle Study Club has built one of the most trusted educational communities in dentistry, and we’re excited to work together to help clinicians better understand how AI can elevate every aspect of practice, not just diagnostics, but the broader systems that support exceptional patient care.”

Through the partnership, Pearl and Seattle Study Club will deliver educational initiatives throughout the year focused on helping dental professionals navigate the rapidly evolving role of AI in dentistry while maintaining a strong emphasis on clinical judgment, patient trust, and real-world implementation.

About Pearl

Pearl is a dental AI company committed to enhancing how patient care is delivered. Founded in 2019 by a team with decades of experience developing successful, enterprise-grade computer vision solutions, Pearl introduced the first-ever FDA-cleared AI capable of reading and instantly identifying diseases in dental x-rays. With regulatory clearance in 120 countries, Pearl's AI assists dentists in making precise clinical decisions and effectively communicating with patients, thereby transforming the dental care experience worldwide. As dentistry’s global AI leader, Pearl is committed to the ongoing innovation of robust, accessible AI tools that improve patient health outcomes and build greater trust in dental medicine. To request a demo, please visit hellopearl.com/demo

About Seattle Study Club

Seattle Study Club is the nation’s leading dental education network, empowering professionals to connect, learn, and achieve clinical excellence in a collaborative community. Founded in 1992 by Dr. Michael Cohen, it has grown into a global network offering hands-on learning, case discussions, and access to world-renowned speakers. Learn more at www.seattlestudyclub.com. 


Monday, June 15, 2026

Toothbrush Bristles Harbor Bacteria - *Lots* of Bacteria


 

An interesting study in the International Journal of Dental Hygiene examined the way patients clean their toothbrushes after use and the bacteria found in the bristles.  The title of the study is Knowledge Evaluation and Assessment of Bacterial Contamination of Toothbrushes.

The human mouth contains billions of microscopic organisms and those are easily transferred to anything that comes in contact with the mouth or saliva.  Probably the most common object that goes into the mouth and than back out is the toothbrush.  Most people replace their toothbrush every 90-180 days, but over that time bacteria are transferred from the mouth to the brush and then back to the mouth.

If you think about that analytically... most people brush their teeth at least twice a day.  The recommended time for brushing is 2 minutes.  That means for roughly 4 minutes a day toothbrush bristles are in contact wtih teeth.  In 90 days of 4 minutes per day contact, the bristles have been in contact with the teeth for 90x4=360 minutes.  During that time a lot of microorganisms are transferred to the bristles.

After use most people rinse the brush under running water and some will even then tap their brush against the sink to remove excess water from the bristles, but that's about as much cleaning as most people do.  The bristles are left moist and then placed in some type of holder until the next use.

The study analyzed cleaning methods used by the study subjects and then monitored the brushes used to see what bacteria was present and how it grew.  It's an interesting read and it can be a little disconcerting when you think about it.  Lots of bugs are growing on those bristles as they sit in the bathroom waiting for the next use.

For years I've used a UV toothbrush sanitizer.   There are a lot of them on the market and most can be purchased for under $50.  In basic terms, it's a small LED that uses UV-C light focused on the bristles that kill the germs growing there.  I started using one when they first came on the market thinking it was probably "a good idea", but not out of any real concern.  However, more and more research is showing how much bacteria is present in those bristles so I'm glad I was an early adopter.

The study makes for some fascinating reading and you can find it with this link.  This is also a subject that professionals should be discussing with our patients.  Most people don't really think about things like this, but it's definitely something patient should be aware of.  This is especially true for patients that are immunocompromised.  Anything that reduces exposure to pathogens for those patients is important.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

UAB Dental Specialists Restore Bird's Beak at Birmingham Zoo

 


Under the supervision of a veterinarian, dentists can treat and help animals.  I've known a few dentists with big hearts that have worked with their local zoo to help provide needed care to the animals.  

Today's post is about a situation that developed with Beauregard, a green aracari bird at the Birmingham Zoo.  It seems the poor little guy fractured about 1/2 the length of his upper beak and needed to have it replaced.  He was only 3 months old at the time and being so badly injured, it looked like he might not survive.

To try to help him, the Birmingham Zoo called their local dental school The University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Dentistry and asked if they might be able to do something.  What those doctors managed to do is pretty amazing.  Not only did they figure out a way to save Beauregard, but he's now thriving.

The specialists included an oral & maxillofacial surgeon, a prosthetist, and a maxillofacial prosthodontist.  That team created a permanent repair for Beauregard's beak.  The amazing part is that, not only did they restore his function, but they managed to fabricate the prosthesis to the same weight as the original so that he can still fly normally.  If the prosthesis had been lighter or heavier than the original, it would have affected the bird's stability in flight.

This is a heart warming story and the video of what they did is pretty incredible.  I love outside the box thinking and this story is definitely an example of that.  How they figured out how to accomplish all of this is beyond me, but I thought everyone would get a kick out of learning about it.  

The story and accompanying video can be found here.  I highly recommend you check it out.  It's one of those things that will bring a smile to your face and give you that warm fuzzy feeling.  


Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Ottimate Becomes First AP Platform to Launch MCP Integration, Further Strengthens Conversational AP Offerings


 In the past few years we've seen a lot of artificial intelligence move into the dental industry.  Things started out clinically and then moved into the administrative realm fairly quickly.  Most offices begin the AI journey with systems to help analyze radiographs.  Once a radiographic system proves itself, offices often look for other ways to improve workflows with AI.  Things like AI phone assistants, AI schedulers, and AI insurance verification are really starting to take root in many offices.

However, one of the areas where AI hasn't made much of an impact yet is in financial management and accounting in offices.  The good news is... that's about to change... drastically.  Ottimate today is announcing  an AI system that will help with AP in ways we haven't seen before.  As I frequently say, dentistry as a business is a high wire act as the office balances between revenue coming in and revenue going out.  Having as much data as possible on AP makes that balancing act much easier and Ottimate promises to make that data management easier and faster.  The company helps several industries in this realm of financial management and dentistry is just one of them.

All the details are below.


Ottimate introduces MCP support, giving finance leaders direct access to AP data within the LLM of their choice.

Ottimate, the leading AI-powered Accounts Payable (AP) automation platform, today announced the first Model Context Protocol (MCP) integration in the market, enabling finance leaders to bring AP data directly into Large Language Models (LLMs) for comprehensive financial insights. The announcement is part of Ottimate's 2026 Summer Release, which also includes enhancements to Ottimate Copilot and a new wave of AI capabilities designed to protect profit margins.  

CFOs and finance leaders increasingly rely on AI assistants like Claude and ChatGPT to ask questions, synthesize data, and drive strategy but AP data has remained siloed, forcing finance teams to spend 11+ hours a week running reports. With a simple prompt, users can now get critical insights on financial health, cash flow exposure, and payment trends in seconds, a process that historically took days, weeks, or a third-party consultant.

"CFOs shouldn't have to spend hours pulling together information from different sources, " said Shawn Lane, CEO of Ottimate.  "By being first to market with an MCP integration, we're giving finance leaders the full picture they need to make confident decisions fast."

Ottimate Copilot, the industry's first conversational AP tool, also receives significant upgrades in this release: statement reconciliation support, deeper spend analytics, and a redesigned interface surfacing the metrics customers care about most.  

Rounding out the Summer Release are two features targeting the most repetitive, error-prone tasks in AP. Risk-based spend approvals automatically flag low-risk transactions, letting approvers focus attention where it matters and accelerate reimbursements. Autosuggested GL coding for expense submissions cuts manual effort and helps accounting teams close faster with fewer corrections, moving teams closer to truly touchless operations.

"Every release we ship helps lean teams move quickly, stay focused on high-value work, and never become a bottleneck, " said Don Dittmar, Chief Product Officer of Ottimate.  "This summer's release delivers that across the entire platform."

To learn more, visit ottimate.com.

About Ottimate

Ottimate is an AI-powered Accounts Payable (AP) automation platform that empowers finance teams to reduce costs, prevent overpayments, detect fraud, and enforce policy compliance across the entire invoice-to-payment lifecycle. Designed for companies that process complex invoices at scale, Ottimate automates over 90% of the payables accounting process, reducing manual errors, saving time, and even monetizing the payment process. Ottimate’s AI goes beyond traditional automation by applying human-like intelligence refined by over a decade of real-world use and powered by state-of-the-art deep learning. For more information, visit ottimate.com.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Join Me for a Webinar on Intraoral Scanning June 17th

 


Intraoral scanning is mainstream and only getting better!  In an industry survey I saw not too long ago, answers indicated if an office didn't yet own a scanner, it was the #1 tech the doctor expected to purchase next.

I actually started digital scanning way back when with a CEREC 2.  For those of you who don't know, that little machine booted with *a floppy disc*!!!  Basically all that means is that I've been scanning for well over two decades now and I've seen changes that have blown my mind.  Scanning is no longer a "cool to have" technology, it's a "must have".  

However, like any piece of technology it needs to be used the right way.  Add to that, there are tons of things you can do with scanning and those scans.  Intraoral scanners are a gateway technology to a totally digital workflow.  So if you're scanning and want to know some tips & tricks, join me on June 17th.  If you don't yet own a scanner and are trying to decide exactly how to proceed, join in as well.

The great folks at Medidenta have asked me to tell you about my experiences and what I've learned. I can't imagine practicing without this tech and I'm excited to share what I know with all of you.  Follow this link to register.  

Monday, June 8, 2026

Clinical Integration of Artificial Intelligence and Mixed Reality-Based Dynamic Navigation for Implant Placement in the Anterior Maxilla


 Today's post dovetails well with a discussion I recently had on The Technology Evangelist Podcast with Dr. Mark Whitefield.  

Mark is an incredibly smart, outside the box thinker and the developer of the "Flex-on-X" implant retained denture system.  He's working on using a combination of AI and AR (Augmented Reality) vision to help during implant placement surgeries.  The concept is to use digital surgical glasses combined with magnification to superimpose CBCT and other digital info directly over the surgical site during treatment to simplify the procedure.  Imagine being able to see under the tissue live while you create the osteotomy!  Live and dynamically updating info throughout the surgical process is on the near horizon.  It's a fascinating discussion!

It also goes well with a recent study published in The Journal of Dentistry regarding using similar systems in a study based environment to evaluate the benefits or drawbacks to using this type of system in implant placement.  In a nutshell, the study found:

Results

The clinical integration of AI and MR-DN allowed accurate and time-efficient guided implant placement in the anterior maxilla.

However, there's a lot more to it than just the results achieved.  You can find the article here to get a really deep dive into how they performed the procedure and how they evaluated the results.  

The development of technologies that allow multiple datasets to be merged and projected over the surgical field through vision systems holds an incredible promise for surgery.  The potential benefits to both medicine and dentistry and massive.  My gut tells me that we are standing right on the edge of an incredible leap forward in how all surgeries are performed.  Information is powerful.  Simply put, the more data that a doctor has access to, the more potential for improvements we have.  Being able to take this clinical data and provide it directly into the doctor's eyes could change things incredibly.  

Be sure to watch the Dr. Mark Whitefield episode and then spend some time reading the study to see what the future of surgery holds.  

The podcast is available almost anywhere you get your podcasts.  To get links that will take you to your favorite platform follow this link to the Medidenta page that has all the info.  



Thursday, June 4, 2026

California Attorney General Bonta Announces Settlement with Aspen Dental Over Corporate Practice of Dentistry and False Advertising

 

Today's post is a recent press release from the Office of the Attorney General for the State of California.  The state has been in litigation with Aspen Dental and the info below is on the settlement agreed to by both parties.


California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced reaching a settlement with Aspen Dental Management, Inc. (Aspen Dental) for allegedly violating California’s ban on the corporate practice of dentistry and engaging in false and misleading advertising. Owned by private equity firms, Aspen Dental describes itself as a dental support organization that provides business management and administrative services to dental offices, each of which operates under the “Aspen Dental” name and branding. However, the company is alleged to have exceeded that role by, among other things, interfering with and unlawfully directing the practice, ownership, and management of dentistry in California. The settlement, which remains subject to court approval, includes unprecedented injunctive terms to protect California consumers and clinical staff, $2 million in penalties, and $300,000 in restitution funds for certain patients.  

“As Americans face an affordability crisis, there is no room for unlawful business practices that can increase healthcare costs or harm consumers. We allege that Aspen Dental went beyond providing business support services and became involved in managing dental operations, while also using advertising that misrepresented services to consumers,” said Attorney General Bonta. “With this settlement, my office is making clear that patient care must remain in the hands of licensed professionals. If you believe you are a victim of false or misleading advertising, please report it to oag.ca.gov/report.” 

Since its founding in 1998, Aspen Dental has expanded to more than a thousand offices nationwide. It entered California in 2019 and has since opened 19 offices and served tens of thousands of patients. As part of this expansion, it is alleged that Aspen Dental did not contract with existing dental offices, but rather selected, purchased, staffed, and advertised its offices without clearly identifying an independent dentist-owner. For example, Aspen Dental designed, built out, and furnished all of its offices and made detailed decisions about each location, down to the artwork in bathrooms. It also selected, purchased, and installed all dental equipment across offices.

Aspen Dental also encouraged the sale of particular products and services through direct incentives to practices’ clinical employees. For example, Aspen Dental developed and implemented an incentive program for hygienists to encourage the sale of clear aligners. The program offered hygienists $50 per sale to new patients or $100 per sale to existing patients. Business practices of this kind limited dentist-owners, restricted staff, misguided patients, and purportedly violated California’s ban on the corporate practice of dentistry and California’s Unfair Competition Law. 

Further, many advertisements that Aspen Dental created contained misleading and/or false representations, including misleading testimonials, ambiguity, misleading cost claims, and inexact pricing language. Some Aspen Dental advertisements represented that its offices worked with all insurance or no insurance. However, Aspen Dental offices did not accept state or federally funded insurance programs. Other advertisements described low prices for certain products or procedures without clearly disclosing the factors that affect the price or what’s provided.

As a part of the settlement, Aspen Dental has agreed to $2 million in penalties, $300,000 in restitution funds, and injunctive terms, including:

  • Not replacing any practice owner with another dentist of its choosing.
  • Not requiring practice owners to effectively give up ownership of any dental practices if they decide to terminate their contractual relationship with Aspen Dental.
  • Not owning the property for any practice. 
  • Not practicing dentistry, including but not limited to owning or managing any dental office.
  • Not basing service fees on revenue, sales, or profits.
  • Not suggesting, directing, or encouraging any licensed clinician, other than a practice owner, to sell or increase revenue for any service or product.
  • Not compensating any of its employees based on the sales or revenue of practices.
  • Not paying any practice employees incentives based on practice sales, revenue, or profit, including the sale of a particular service or product.
  • Discontinuing the use of and not enforcing any existing contractual provision that restricts where any licensed clinician may practice or be employed. 
  • Providing a written fee schedule for products and laboratory services.
  • Registering with the Dental Board of California as a Dental Group Advertising and Referral Service. 
  • Clearly and conspicuously identifying the practice owners name when creating, publishing, or disseminating advertisements.


Wednesday, June 3, 2026

AMD Picasso Pro Laser Available for Pre-Order


I've always enjoyed endodontics and anytime something new and exciting in the field comes along, I always look at it with interest.  As a tech guy, I'm always looking for the latest and greatest, but I *really* perk up when I see something that just might make endo easier and/or provide better results.

Along those lines, I recently made a post about AMD Lasers and their new LEAP endo system that uses their newest laser, the Picasso Pro.

Today I'd like to pass along some more info for those of you who are interested in this new system.  I recently was notified by AMD that this new system is available for pre-order that includes a $600 savings.  

Personally, I think the value here is that this isn't an "endo specific" system.  The Picasso Pro is a fully functional diode laser that allows you to use it in a variety of clinical applications.  The big plus is that it also gives you a new way to perform endo for your patients.

I've been using soft tissue lasers in my clinical practice since around 1998 and I can tell you from personal experience that soft tissue lasers will change the way you think and treat.  The predictability of lasers allows you to do some amazing things.  As an example, I'll use gingival recontouring in aesthetic cases.  Properly used, a soft tissue laser can allow you to perform gingival recontouring as well as preparation for aesthetic dentistry at the same appointment.

A laser can allow you to gently ablate tissue that doesn't shrink as it heals.  That means the gingival margin stays exactly as you contoured it.  When the crowns or veneers are seated, the tissue is right where you left it.  This means patients get their cosmetic treatment faster with more predictable results.

Of course that's just one example of the benefits of laser dentistry.  You can also perform biopsies, tissue retraction for fixed prosthetics, frenectomies, and much, much more.  I've got several soft tissue lasers in the office and if someone came in and stole them, I'd be on the phone the next day ordering a new one.  Their effect on my treatment is that profound.  

Adding endodontics to the procedural list is the icing on the cake.  AMD has been working on developing the LEAP system since at least 2019 and they have done a lot of research and testing to fine tune this to get it just right. 

Here's what AMD has to say about the Picasso Pro and the new LEAP endo system...


A New Frontier in Laser Dentistry

The new Picasso Pro isn’t just another diode laser system; it’s a complete practice tool chest allowing you to deploy the power of lasers in ways you never imagined.  

Root Canal Disinfection

Developed exclusively for the Picasso Pro, the LEAP Laser Endodontic Ablation Procedure is a generational breakthrough in interior tooth dentistry. Achieve 99.999% canal disinfection in just a few seconds while reducing pain and retreatment risk. Stop referring out simple endo cases!

Pain-Free Injections

The Picasso Pro also features the LAPA Laser-Assisted Pain Alleviation protocol. Use photobiomodulation (PBM) and specially designed disposable tips to deliver chemical-free painless anesthetic injections. Say goodbye to flinching patients!

Bang for Your Buck

The Picasso Pro was created to elevate more aspects of your practice than ever before: hygiene, periodontics, smile aesthetics, restorative dentistry, endodontics, you name it. And at less than $10,000, its value is unbeatable. Preorder now and receive over $600 in free specialty tips and other goodies!

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Pearl RCM Launches to Improve Insurance Workflows and Claim Outcomes in Dentistry


AI companies continue to expand their offerings and menus of services to the industry.  The competition in this segment of the market is fierce and AI service providers are constantly pushing their R&D teams for more features and smoother workflows.  Here's the latest info from Pearl on their new features and even a mention of what's coming in the not too distant future:
 

New Pearl product embeds AI insurance intelligence into daily practice and clinical operations, streamlining benefits verification, reducing patient billing surprises, and helping practices submit cleaner claims faster

Pearl, the global leader in dental AI solutions, today announced Pearl RCM, a revenue cycle management platform that embeds insurance intelligence throughout the dental workflow. By connecting eligibility verification, imaging quality assurance, clinical documentation, and clean claim preparation, Pearl RCM helps practices create and submit cleaner claims, reduce reimbursement delays, and improve revenue predictability.

Dental practices struggle to maintain predictable revenue cycles and expend considerable staff resources navigating the complex, fragmented patient insurance claim process. Often patient insurance is verified in one system (or manually across many), clinical documentation and imaging is loaded in another, and claim creation and submission is completed in a third. Staff piece claims together manually by switching between insurance portals and software platforms. This disconnected workflow frequently leads to errors: Claims are filed for treatments that are not covered by a patient’s insurance, required documentation is left out, clinical evidence doesn’t meet carrier requirements, etc. The result: Claims are subject to processing delays, downcodes, and denials. These are major pain points for dental practice owners, who ranked insurance-related issues, including delayed or denied payments and low reimbursement rates, among the top concerns for dental practices heading into 2026. Across U.S. healthcare more broadly, claim denials cost providers close to $30 billion annually. The impact of insurance friction extends to patients as well: Unexpected out-of-pocket costs are a key factor contributing to dentistry’s patient trust gap.

Unlike traditional dental RCM systems that operate downstream after treatment has already been completed, Pearl RCM embeds insurance intelligence upstream – during scheduling, imaging, diagnosis, and treatment planning – when issues can still be identified and corrected before they delay, downcode, or compromise a claim. This unique approach ensures that every clinical interaction is claim-ready, eliminating a major source of administrative overhead in dental practice management and revenue operations. With Pearl RCM, insurance eligibility verification and claim optimization integrate directly with daily clinical and operational workflows by surfacing coverage data, missing prerequisites, and claim-readiness status in high visibility touchpoints within Pearl’s dental AI platform.

Critically, Pearl RCM is built on a foundation of FDA-cleared radiologic AI that powers key capabilities including real-time x-ray quality assessment at the point of capture, automated selection of clinically relevant AI-annotated images for claim attachments, and AI-generated narratives grounded in what the imaging actually shows.

“Dental practices lose enormous time and revenue navigating disconnected insurance workflows,” said Ophir Tanz, founder and CEO of Pearl. “Pearl RCM addresses claim issues proactively, before they become denials. Moving insurance verification and claim readiness to the point of care gives practices clarity and predictability that they've never had, and patients get a billing experience that finally matches the quality of their clinical care.”

Customers can already see the impact:

“Pearl saves our team hours daily by both auto-verifying insurance and making coverage details clear and easy to find,” said Christine Marcin of Ballard Dental Partners. “The new RCM toolset goes a big step further, ensuring we have the right evidence, codes, and documentation to clear claims without insurance back and forth.”

In early deployments across select practices, Pearl RCM has helped teams achieve:

  • Up to 35 staff hours per week saved on eligibility verification and claim creation
  • Up to 80% fewer downcodes and denial related to missing, incomplete or non-compliant supporting documentation.
  • Up to 2X improvement in first-pass clean claim submission rates

The platform's core features deliver clarity and efficiency across the entire revenue cycle:

  • Precheck™: Confirms eligibility and code-level benefits automatically from four clearinghouses and over 300 carrier portals. Coverage data, including remaining benefits and frequency limits, is surfaced directly in the appointment card and schedule view, reducing time spent calling payers and helping to eliminate patient billing surprises.
  • Claim Actions: Proactive, in-schedule alerts guide the team by flagging missing X-rays, outdated imaging, quality issues, or coverage gaps ahead of the visit, connecting clinical need, image quality, and insurance requirements in one view.
  • Imagecheck™: Reduces avoidable denials due to non-diagnostic x-ray evidence by flagging x-ray issues at the point of capture, detecting quality defects like cone cuts, poor exposure, or missing apices before they reach a claim.
  • Clean Claim (coming soon): Helps teams build stronger claims through automation, including Auto-Attach, which automatically selects and attaches the most clinically relevant, AI-annotated images, and Auto-Remark, which generates tailored clinical narratives and remarks for each procedure code and payer.
  • Claim Insights (coming soon): Offers retrospective analytics on claim outcomes across the practice, surfacing actionable patterns by procedure, payer, provider, and location to help fix the root cause of lost revenue.

For practices, this suite of capabilities power an end-to-end approach to revenue cycle automation that enables a highest standard of revenue cycle efficiency in the dental industry. Pearl RCM is available now to dental practices across the United States. To learn more, visit hellopearl.com/products/rcm.

About Pearl

Pearl is a dental AI company committed to enhancing how patient care is delivered. Founded in 2019 by a team with decades of experience developing successful, enterprise-grade computer vision solutions, Pearl introduced the first-ever FDA-cleared AI capable of reading and instantly identifying diseases in dental x-rays. With regulatory clearance in 120 countries, Pearl's AI assists dentists in making precise clinical decisions and effectively communicating with patients, thereby transforming the dental care experience worldwide. As dentistry’s global AI leader, Pearl is committed to the ongoing innovation of robust, accessible AI tools that improve patient health outcomes and build greater trust in dental medicine. To request a demo, please visit hellopearl.com/demo.