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Medical Forum / General / Dentistry / October 2004

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Dentistry in 2014 - A retrospective Discussion Topic

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John Chewter - 14 Oct 2004 06:45 GMT
Tongue firmly in cheek ;)

As the last few dental X-Ray machines are being removed from surgeries,
Kodiak Bear's Tricorder Division profits soar.
'The new hand held KBTX was a great introduction to the market - once the
patients got used to the hologram's appearance, sales did a vertical
climb....'. The Tricorder looks set to completely replace the acclaimed
'Tomography Wand' in just a few years.

Since President Powell pushed through the Amalgam Replacement Bill in 2012,
dentists have been making a better living.
"Years ago, I thought that Yan Droo" was nuts said Joe El  but my revenue is
up by 300% - and 5 years repeat work on Tax Dollars says 'Yes!' to me. Now I
have bought my new mansion by de-Nile - life is sweet!

Galaxa-Cyber-Guygy profits steadily climbed after their award winning dental
filling compound is rolled out across the world.  "Who would have thought,
only 5 years ago, that modified spider silk would have been so widely used
in Dentistry ?" said Yan Droo, Galaxa's PR Agent. "

;)
_______________________

The question is: What do you expect to see in your surgery in 10 years
that's not here now?
John Chewter - 14 Oct 2004 17:42 GMT
The more I research the technology for the future of dentistry the more
interesting it gets

I have found a miniature X-Ray Head in trials that seems to give good X-Rays
at 1/6 to 1/10 the body dose.
Microwave Imaging and ultrasound research trials seem to be progressing well
giving 3d and 2d (slices) views without X-Ray hazard.

Do you foresee these technologies being used in your surgery?

> Tongue firmly in cheek ;)
>
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
> The question is: What do you expect to see in your surgery in 10 years
> that's not here now?
Steven Fawks - 14 Oct 2004 17:57 GMT
Gee Dan, you've got competition.

LOL
Fawks

> Tongue firmly in cheek ;)
>
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
> The question is: What do you expect to see in your surgery in 10 years
> that's not here now?
 
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