Search results for dental

Canadian studio Atelier Échelle has overhauled an orthodontic clinic in Montreal to create a "warm and inviting, residential atmosphere" with medical equipment positioned among light wood features. Read more
About 10,000 years ago, a group of hunter-gatherers were hanging out in what is now south-western Sweden chewing pieces of birch tar. New analysis of that substance reveals that they may have had very modern dental issues.Continue ReadingCategory: ScienceTags: Archeology, Stockholm University, Dental, Diet
ahochdrei inserts a diagonal dividing steel-clad wall to define the space. The post bespoke furniture pieces made of steel and wood adorn redesigned berlin dental practice appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
Rich materials, ambient lighting and a waiter-serviced aftercare lounge are among the hotel-informed features that interiors firm Studio Author has incorporated into this dental practice in Toronto to help patients feel more at ease. Read more
The minimalist interior of this Montreal oral surgery clinic by local studio Appareil Architecture "adopts a residential aesthetic" to help patients and employees feel relaxed. Read more
For the first time, researchers have found a bacterium that forms superstructures when it gets caught in sticky traps made by other bacteria, helping it erode enamel and form cavities. The finding could lead to new ways to keep our teeth clear of the invaders.Continue ReadingCategory: Medical, ScienceTags: Cavity, Dental, Biofilm, Microbes, Bacteria, University of Pennsylvania, Teeth
the examination room features generous glazings that enable the patients on the dental chairs to gaze outwards. The post tetsuo yamaji architects builds a dental clinic with residential comfort in japan appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
As the hardest tissue in the human body, enamel is not an easy material for engineers to mimic, but doing so could mean big things in materials science and regenerative medicine. Researchers are now reporting a breakthrough in this area, by tweaking the composition of a naturally occurring mineral to emulate the microstructure of natural enamel in a new type of dental coating, and do so in a way
just by biting down on it and grinding for a few seconds, users can gently clean all interdental spaces in about 14 seconds -- a quantum leap in oral hygiene. The post this custom 3D-printed dental device flosses all teeth at once, in just a few seconds appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.


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