Sunday, June 30, 2013

What You Pay Me For: 2nd Molars 2

If you are one of my patients, you pay me to do dentistry that hopefully rises to the level of excellence.
You want me to:

1. Give as painless an injection as possible,
2. Spend as much time as needed without rushing to see one or two other patients at the same time in other rooms,
3. Remove all the tooth decay, leave as much healthy tooth structure as possible and finally
4. Restore my tooth to the way it was before having a cavity.
5. Charge a fair fee commensurate with the time and talent involved in performing your dentistry.

These photos are again of a 2nd molar that had tooth decay under an existing mercury filling (the black area.)


My good friend Dr. Francisco Banchs suggested that I try to take a photo of this tooth without using a rubber dam. I told him that it would be almost impossible to keep the saliva off of the tooth and keep the cheek from folding over the tooth.

We have no other option but to pursue excellence. You, your family and your friends deserve nothing less.

Friday, June 28, 2013

Supporting the Community That We Live In

I have always believed that philanthropy is the obligation of those who are blessed with a good life.
I live and work in Saratoga Springs, NY and I have selected a few community oriented groups to contribute money to. When the President of the National Dance Museum asked me to sponsor a ballet shoe (called 'pointe shoes") , I immediately agreed to donate money for 'my slipper.'

Doing the Right Thing, as you know, is very important in my life and I feel most fortunate to be able to contribute to the vitality of my community. Many of the successful businesses in Saratoga have contributed to the Dance Museum and ballet shoes are popping up all over town.

These are photos of MY shoe. I thank all of my patients for my successes.  Thank you for the opportunity to take care of you and make contributions in your name and your honor.


My wife Susan standing with the Alice in Wonderland shoe

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

The Only Way

Placing a resin bonded white filling in the upper second molar is a challenging task under ideal circumstances. In less than a perfectly controlled environment, placing a bonded filling in a second molar is a total waste of time and money and it will fail in relatively short order causing either a toothache or a swollen face.

 What does 'under ideal circumstances' mean?

I t means that the dentist has complete visualization of the entire tooth, can see all of the tooth decay so that it can be removed and preventing all saliva from touching the tooth during the bonding process.

If the dentist does not use a rubber dam for isolation, and 95% of dentists do not use a rubber dam, there is virtually no chance of seeing the tooth clearly, eliminating all tooth decay and placing a well bonded resin filling. The rubber dam was first used in the mid 1800s  and I have used one for almost 40 YEARS.

Why would any patient pay a dentist to place a filling that has 100 % chance of failure? And the bigger question is, "Why would a dentist not use a rubber dam?"

In a word: LAZINESS.


The tooth closest to the bottom of the photo and that has a rubber dam clasp is the second molar. The  top photo shows all the tooth decay removed and the bottom photo shows a perfectly placed direct resin bonded filling. Note the abscence   of  the tongue,   lips, and saliva.This is definitely a very cool way to restore teeth.

Friday, June 21, 2013

The Right Thing

Why do we do the right thing?
Because it is the Right Thing to Do. Nothing more. Is it redundant to say this when the answer to the question is THE QUESTION ITSELF?

We consulted with a college student and her Mother two years ago and I hadn't heard anything from the patient until last week when her Mother called and said that they wanted to proceed with treatment including the minor gum tissue surgery. I saw both of them on Monday to take an impression that I could use to create a surgical guide to give to Dr. Collins for the gum surgery. It took three hours, ending at 11PM ,to fabricate the surgical guide and at its completion, I recognized that the restorative option of veneers would not solve this beautiful lady's problem. Her solution was to correct the unesthetic results created by the orthodontic treatment by seeing a different highly qualified orthodontist  and not by cutting down this 20 year olds teeth to nothing. I was frustrated that I had worked the three hours to learn that my efforts would be for nothing.

On Wednesday morning, I called the Mother and explained that if her daughter was MY daughter, I would NOT place veneers on her teeth unless and until she had orthodontic therapy again. I do not believe in performing treatment on a patient when there is little benefit or value for the patient OR if the results end up leaving the patient in a worse situation, long term. I was very fortunate that the patient's Mother is very bright and understood exactly what I was trying to tell her. In closing the conversation, she said to me, "I want to thank you for your concern for my daughter and for your high ethical standards."

I happily gave up a $15,000 fee because it just was not THE RIGHT THING to go ahead with veneers. The reality is that BOTH the patient and I 'win.' The patient's teeth are not ruined and I can live with a clear conscience.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Almost 5 Years in Saratoga

It is hard to believe that in less than 6 months I will have be practicing in Saratoga Springs for FIVE years. So how do I  think it's going and was moving the right move?

Many patients still ask why I left Troy, NY. The answer, as most of  you know, is that I no longer had a sufficient number of patients to sustain a dental practice and the majority of my patients did not live in the Troy area. Had I not relocated my office to Saratoga, I would be retired for almost 5 years.

Moving my practice has been an invigorating experience and has resulting in making many new friends as well as patients.

I was not well liked by my colleagues in Troy but in Saratoga, many young dentists visit my office to discuss their cases and ask for my opinion. I help young dentists by giving them the benefit of my knowledge and experience and they help me to remain vital and young.

I have done the best clinical dentistry of my career the last five years which translates into taking better care of you and your family.

After 37 years, I love dentistry more than ever.

6 Month Dental Check UP?

I read the article on the necessity of twice annual dental checkups with great interest. What was more interesting to me was the bloggers who posted comments ABOUT the article.

What did most   of the people who commented on the article think about dentists and dentistry?

The overwhelming majority of the bloggers think that dentists are crooks only out to take your money and provide either unnecessary or excessively profitable treatment. Another frequent comment was that if you brush and floss regularly, you probably don't need to visit a dentist except infrequently.

Anyone who reads my blogs on a regular basis knows that I believe that the majority of crowns placed do not strengthen teeth and a well done direct bonded resin using a rubber dam is probably a better restoration than a crown EXCEPT WHEN A POSTERIOR TOOTH HAS A ROOT CANAL AND THEN A CROWN IS MANDATORY.

I did a Google search to find out what percent of the population flosses daily. The number of daily flossers is somewhere between 17-30% which means that about 80% of the population needs more than one cleaning a year.

Why do I truly believe that 6 months checkups are a good thing?

1. The average dental patient DOES accumulate plaque and tarter and it is wise to remove it.
2. If you have any chance of surviving oral cancer, it MUST be caught and treated early.
3. Dentists are usually the first doctors to recognize that a patient has gastric reflux (heart burn) because of the significant destruction of our natural teeth. Dentists can then refer the patient to their family doctor for life saving treatment.
4. The most commonly prescribed medicine in America are anti-depressants and one of the most common side effects is dry mouth. Dry mouth is the number one cause of rampant tooth decay (caries) among adults.
5. Children no longer eat three healthy meals a day with one snack. The graze on food all day long which results in significant amounts of cavities.

Is there scientific evidence that 6 month check ups are needed? Probably not but it is still a damn good idea to do it anyway.

If any of my patients think that money is the motivating factor in how I treat you, you would be completely mistaken. I would never hurt anyone to increase my income nor would I recommend treatment that is not in YOUR best interest.

After reading the majority of comments  by bloggers on the New York Times website who responded to the article on 6 month dental visits, I came away thinking that the Times readership is not very bright.
Sad!!!!

The New York Times Article: Are Six Month Dental Visits Necessary?



  • FACEBOOK
  • TWITTER
  • GOOGLE+
  • SAVE
  • E-MAIL
  • SHARE
  • PRINT
This is a verbatim copy of an article on dentistry in today's Times.
What do YOU think?
My opinion in my next blog.
For decades, dentists have urged all adults to schedule preventive visits every six months. But a new study finds that annual cleanings may be adequate for adults without certain risk factors for periodontal disease while people with a high risk may need to go more often.
Almost half of adults age 30 and older, about 65 million, have a form of chronic inflammatory gum disease that can ultimately lead to tooth loss.The study, published on Monday in The Journal of Dental Research, suggests that the frequency of dental visits for cleanings and other preventive services should be tailored to each person’s risk factors for periodontal disease.
“The findings suggest that for low-risk patients, a yearly prophylactic visit does prevent tooth loss over a protracted period of 16 years, and there’s no significant difference in an added visit,” said Dr. Robert J. Genco, a periodontist and SUNY distinguished professor of oral biology at the University at Buffalo, who was not involved in the study. “They found if you had more than one risk factor, that maybe two visits isn’t optimal.”
Prevention reduces tooth loss, but there has been little evidence to support a twice-yearly visit to the dentist for everyone. The new study looked at insurance claims data for 5,117 adults, primarily in Michigan, to determine whether tooth extraction was linked to a previous history of one or two dental visits a year in patients with varying risks for periodontal disease. The subjects were classified as high risk if they smoked or had diabetes or certain variations in the interleukin-1 gene, which some studies have suggested may be linked to periodontal disease in white people. Subjects were deemed low risk if they had none of these risks.
Researchers found no statistical difference in tooth loss among low-risk patients whether they went for a checkup once or twice a year. But in the high-risk group, roughly 17 percent of patients who had had two visits a year had a tooth extracted, compared with roughly 22 percent of those who had had just one a year.
The researchers said that even two visits a year might not suffice to reduce tooth loss in patients with multiple risk factors.
“If you are high risk, it is much more important for you to be seen frequently, but for the low-risk people it’s not,” said Dr. William V. Giannobile, the study’s lead author and the chairman of the department of periodontics at the University of Michigan School of Dentistry.
“The take-away is not that you don’t need to see the dentist, it’s that each patient needs to be treated in their own individual way,” he added.
Two authors of the study own shares in Interleukin Genetics, the company that makes the genotype test for interleukin-1. The company helped finance the study along with the National Institutes of Health.
Dr. Genco called the paper “a major advance in using risk profiles to tailor-make a preventive regimen.”
But Dr. Ray C. Williams, a periodontist and the dean of the School of Dental Medicine at Stony Brook University, faulted the study for not directly addressing the subjects’ oral hygiene, a significant factor in tooth loss. Nonetheless, he praised the research because it “sounds the signal that it is time to make dentistry more individual and more personalized” and added, “We ought to be able to tailor the treatment to the need.”
Dr. Paul Beirne, the lead author of a 2007 review of preventive dental visits published in The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and a dentist, said that no conclusions could be drawn from the new study about the optimal frequency of dental visits for cavity management because risk factors for tooth decay were not addressed. The findings are not applicable to children, he noted.
Of the more than 25,000 adults invited to participate, roughly 20 percent returned cheek swabs for the genetic test. It is not known if there are systematic differences between those who participated and those who declined, so results should be interpreted cautiously, he said.
Still, the new study provides evidence that a “one size fits all” preventive regimen is inappropriate, said Dr. Beirne, a lecturer in epidemiology at University College Cork in Ireland.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

The Commoditization of Medicine and Dentistry

I met one of our neighbors in the hallway this evening and because we are all older, we were discussing our knees, hips and shoulders. It always amazes me when people say or imply that all physicians or dentists are all  the same. In effect, they are saying that health care is a commodity which means that  it is all the same and that they will go to the people that accept their insurance, are close to home and are cheap.

Nothing could be further from either the truth or reality. None of the best physicians or dentists participate with insurance plans because they have a back log of people who are clamoring for their expertise.

When I initially called Dr. Alcheck at the Hospital for Special Surgery for a consultation for my rotator cuff repair, I was directed to speak with Harry, the patient concierge, who gave me a list of things that I needed to do (ie x-rays and an MRI) before Dr. Alcheck would even consider taking me on as a patient. Dr. Alcheck requested payment in full and then he would submit my insurance and I would be reimbursed by MY INSURANCE COMPANY.

When Dr. Sculco at Hospital for Special Surgery consulted with me for a total knee replacement, he told me that only after I took the necessary radiographs, scans and a physical would he schedule me for the surgery. And, by the way, my fee is $18,000 and it takes three months to get a surgical appointment.

The best ARE THE BEST because of their passion, skill and talent and they are so far superior to the average clinician that it is hard to believe that they do the same surgery.

When you think that all physicians and dentists are the same, think again. If you don't think about this, you may have regrets after your treatment.
All doctors are not the same.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

A Visit by the Dean

The Dean of SUNY/Bufallo  School of Medicine came to Saratoga Springs to introduce himself. It was our first meeting since he became the Dean four years ago. It was also an attempt to mend fences on his part. With the exception of a few lectures at the request of the  renown Dr. Carlos Munoz, my former Chairman, I have separated myself from the Dental School. When the previous Dean closed the first Esthetic Center within a Dental School (that Dr. Fred McIntyre and I conceptualized and started in the middle 1990s) after the 2007 school year, I withdrew my personal and financial support for the school. At the time, I was the fourth largest alumni contributor  to the school.

The Dean stated that he wanted to change the Dental School and that he wanted me to be part of that change.  Dental Schools like many institutions, universities and governments are incapable of major change and I let the Dean know that I really did not have any interest at this stage of my career to be part of a school that felt comfortable in teaching last centuries dental information.

I did tell the Dean that I would NOT return to the School as long as my title was Associate Clinical Professor (visiting). The "visiting" status is an insult and must be removed. He agreed to do that if  I consider returning to the school to teach and lecture on occasion. (Don't worry...I'm not leaving you.)

I do not believe in tenure or seniority, both which encourage laxity and reinforce the status quo. None of my patients give me tenure and some leave my practice with or without cause.

Time will tell how this will turn out.

37 Years

This week I began my 37th year practicing dentistry. This is far more than half of my life.
Dentistry was, is and will always be one of the most important parts of my life. It is my life's work.
I BELIEVE and my long time staff would confirm, that we giving our patients the best care that we have ever provided. Many other dentist's personal health, passion and skills decline as they age and approach the end of their careers.

I have been blessed with the ability to have  passion for what I do, great health (great neck and back muscles, great eye sight and talented and stable hands) and the desire to do what I have always done:

Take care of my patients.

My commitment to take care of you is as strong or stronger than the first day that I began as a dentist.

Thank you for being my patient.

I Could Not Help Myself

As most of my blog readers know, I am committed to delivering excellence in dental care. This is NOT a statement that I am the best...far from it. I have told you that there are dentists far more talented than me on the national and international dental stage. Excellence is a  commitment to trying to do my best every minute of everyday that I treat patients.

I saw a patient on Friday for a diagnostic workup (impressions and other measurements) that allows me to study my patient's mouth prior to comprehensive or cosmetic dentistry. While talking  to my patient between several tasks my patient states: " I am NOT  interested in excellence." I was flabbergasted  and responded with: " I am sorry then, you are in the wrong office because I am committed to excellence."

I could not help myself. My response to my patient was a reflex and perhaps I should not have responded with those words.

My staff corrected me this week when I told a patient that there are 49 other dental practices in the area if they do not decide to have treatment in our office. There actually are 78 other dentists in our geographic area. If a patient wants excellence in dental care, I will do my best to deliver it. I am not GOD, I am NOT perfect but I will always do my very best to take care of you.