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Digital Realities 2011 Digital Restorative Symposium Scottsdale, Arizona November 4 - 5, 2011 Westin Kierland Resort & Spa The American College of Prosthodontists celebrates its 41st anniversary and invites its dental technical partners to the annual ACP event

The ACP’s 41st Annual Session is a must-attend meeting for dental technicians! For more information and program details and to join the ACP contact: American College of Prosthodontists www.prosthodontics.org/AS or Palmeri Publishing Inc. at 905.489.1970

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Digital Realities 2011 Friday, November 4, 2011 • Registration Open • Exhibit Hall Open • Continental Breakfast with Exhibitors

7:00am – 4:00pm 7:00am – 2:00pm 7:00am – 7:45am

Saturday, November 5, 2011 • Registration Open

7:00am – 1:00pm

Digital Restorative Symposium Location & Accomodation The Westin Kierland Resort & Spa • 6902 East Greenway Parkway, Scottsdale, AZ 85254 Phone: 480.624.1000 • Toll-Free: 1.800.354.5892 *Note: The ACP room block is currently sold out at the Westin Kierland Resort and Spa. The Westin is completely sold out of rooms on most of the peak nights of the ACP Annual Session. You may call 1.800.354.5892 to be placed on a wait list in the event of cancellations, however it would be best to seek an alternative option for your stay. There are currently rooms available at the Hampton Inn, details are below, the Hampton Inn is located a mile from the Westin and runs a shuttle regularly to the Westin. Please note there is not an ACP block at the Hampton Inn and the shuttle is run by the hotel.

Hampton Inn & Suites Scottsdale AZ • 16620 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85254 Phone: 480.348.9280 • Toll Free: 866.615.7478 • Fax: 480.348.9281 Standard Room Rate: $209 Call 800.354.5892 to make your hotel reservation.

Questions? For all other questions about the ACP’s 41st Annual Session please contact: ACP Central Office Phone: 312.573.1260 Email: acp@prosthodontics.org Palmeri Publishing Inc. Phone: 905.489.1970 Email: ettore@palmeripublishing.com

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Friday, November 4th Lecture: 1:00pm – 5:00pm | Credits: 4.0

Digital Realities for Dental Laboratories Workshop Moderator: Frank Tuminelli, D.M.D. The prosthodontic community of specialists and generalists requires dental technology that offers the advantages of innovation and predictability. The ACP, together with SPECTRUM dialogue, presents this forum to address current technology opportunities for laboratories of one to hundreds of technicians. This workshop offers the latest insights in digital planning, abutment design and manufacture, fabrication of copings, veneers and monolithic crowns, as well as complex frameworks and implant bars. Participants will better match emerging technological capacity with the current realities of prosthodontic practice.

Lecture: 1:00pm – 1:45pm

Recreating Nature: The Harmony of Function and Esthetics with Digital Technology Lee Culp, C.D.T. The attainment of perfection in the duplication of natural dentition is the ultimate achievement in contemporary esthetic dentistry. Understanding the complex relationship between tooth form and function, and how they relate and combine to create the esthetics of natural dentition, is the basis of study for achieving predictable success in oral reconstruction. As patients become more educated about modern dentistry’s advances, their motivation and desire for natural esthetic, restorative dentistry is increasing at a dramatic rate. Dentists are now fulfilling these patient demands but many are concerned only with the visual impact of the smile, with the visual impact of the smile, with total disregard to proper occlusion, envelope of function, and phonetics resulting in broken restorations, speech problems, and patient dissatisfaction. The newest technology to enter dentistry is CAD/CAM Computed Aided Design/Computed Aided Manufacturing. Today’s CAD/CAM systems are being used to design and manufacture metal, alumina, and zirconia frameworks, as well as all ceramic full contour crowns, inlays, and veneers that may be stronger, fit better, and are more esthetic than restorations fabricated using traditional methods. The utilization of new technology will only enhance the close cooperation and working relationship of the Dentist/Technician team. The evolution from Hand design to Digital design and the application of Diagnostic 3-D previews, along with provisional restorations, and their digital replicas to guide the restorative team in the creation of CAD/CAM restorations will be presented, as well as the latest developments in intra-oral laser scanning, materials and computer milling printing technology. This lecture will offer participants a unique insight into the replication of natural esthetics using the Digital Technology while focusing on proper function and occlusal harmony. You will learn a format for achieving that often-elusive goal of pleasing the patient, dentist, and ceramist with creative digital ceramic artistry. At the conclusion of this session, attendees should be able to: • identify the communication possibilities with digital dentistry, and the creation of the digital patient • understand differences in scanning technology. • identify the possibilities of prosthetics creations through milling/printing technologies. ACP 41st Annual Session Scottsdale | November 2 - 5, 2011

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Lecture: 1:45pm – 2:30pm

Restoring Maxillary Anterior Implants: Appropriate Steps and Design Principles to Achieve the Highest Esthetic Results Brahm Miller, D.D.S., F.R.C.D. (C), University of British Columbia High level implant esthetics requires precise steps from diagnosis through to the restorative phase. These steps are not exclusive of each other. They are deliberate and require a clear understanding of what is possible and the skill required to carryout each procedure. Each small advancement will help with the esthetics of the initial result as well as the long term stability of the treatment. Arguably provisionalization and abutment design are two of the most important stages and possibly the most over looked. This presentation will focus specifically on these two items of treatment, illustrating how closely related they are to the surgical phase as well as the final restoration and how important it is for the technician to be intently involved. At the conclusion of this session, attendees should be able to: • understand the relationship between the preciseness the surgical aspect and the restorative outcome. • describe the uniqueness of implant provisionalization in terms of communicating essential information to the technician. • relate design principles of implant provisionals, abutments and crowns in terms of virtual digital preparation to plan for high level esthetics.

Lecture: 2:30pm – 3:15pm

The Art, Science and Digital Dentistry in Modern Implant Dentistry Domenico Cascione, C.D.T., B.S., Santa Monica, California Implant-supported fixed restoration is an appropriate treatment choice for patients with inadequate bone volume. Computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) technology has broadened the scope and application for this treatment option. A milled titanium bar retaining individual all-ceramic zirconium oxide crowns or metal ceramic crowns, with composite resin replicating gingival tissues, is recommended as an acceptable variation for this type of prosthesis. An alternative method for fabricating a mandibular and maxillary implant supported fixed restoration using CAD/CAM technology. At the conclusion of this session, attendees should be able to: • understand cone beam CT technology and digital implant planning. • understand local digital guide fabrication and guided surgery. • understand digital impressions and CAD/CAM restorations.

Lecture: 4:00pm – 5:00pm

Metal-Free Prosthodontics: The Power of Zirconia Michael Moscovitch, D.D.S., Boston University Recent developments in the esthetic properties of dental Zirconia (3YTZP) materials has led to increased uses of this ceramic in place of metal in dental restorations. This presentation will explore the use of dental Zirconia in tooth and implant supported crowns and bridges, as well as implant abutments. The biomechanical properties of Zirconia allows for the design of restorations with minimal or no veneer of felspathic ceramic. The role of Zirconia as an alternative to metal will be clinically demonstrated. The technological processes in the production of these restorations will be discussed with special emphasis

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on the process of digital design and digitally controlled manufacturing. The expanded use of dental Zirconia is creating a paradigm shift in esthetic and functional possibilities in fixed prosthodontics. At the conclusion of this session, attendees should be able to: • understand the classification and the properties of dental ceramics and particularly Dental Zirconia, as they relate to dental restorations. • understand the future of Zirconia as an alternative to metal in dental restorations. • extend understanding of digital restorative technologies.

Saturday, November 5th Lecture: 1:00pm – 5:00pm | Credits: 3.5

Digital Restorative Symposium: Beauty Through Technology Moderator: J. Robert Kelly, D.D.S., M.S., University of Connicticut Health Center The ACP together with SPECTRUM dialogue is pleased to present this symposium focused on digital technologies and the ongoing enhancement of prosthodontic therapy. Internationally renowned the participants from the fundamentals of esthetics to the esoteric phenomena of ceramic technology to the processing of complex ceramic prostheses. The goal of this symposium is to inform and inspire clinicians and technicians working together to embrace new digital technologies that offer diverse opportunities to make prosthodontic therapy “excellence.”

Lecture: 1:00pm – 2:00pm

Balanced Smile Design: All-Ceramic Solutions on Diverse Conditions Jurgen Seger, M.D.T., Schaan, Liechtenstein It is evident that simply using an all-ceramic restoration will not ensure aesthetic and functional success. cases with multiple preparation designs, such as bridges, single crowns, veneers, thin veneers and implant abutments are more and more a reality in the all-ceramic field. This challenging situation makes it difficult to fabricate a perfectly balanced smile design efficiently, when dealing with different substructures, thicknesses and materials. The underlining color of the natural dentition, the different color of the implant abutment, translucency and opacity characteristics of the all-ceramic materials have to be taken into consideration as well. Comprehensive skills on the materials and adequate experience with the fabrication of all-ceramics solutions are the foundation to succeed.

Lecture: 2:00pm – 3:00pm

Aesthetic Approach with Bonded Ceramic Restorations: A Distinctive Approach to Nature Michel Magne, M.D.T., University of California Oral Health Center The most exciting developments in dentistry have emerged within the past decade. Oral implant dentistry, guided tissue regeneration, improvement of CAD/CAM technologies and adhesive restorative dentistry ACP 41st Annual Session Scottsdale | November 2 - 5, 2011

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are growth areas. However bonded ceramic restorations offer a solution that balances the functional and aesthetic needs of the anterior and posterior dentition almost ideally. Dental ceramic’s optimal stiffness, its ideal surface characteristics and the biomechanical strength achieved through high-performance bonding enable the crown of the tooth as a whole to support incisal or masticatory function. Together with the optical effects inherent in the tooth and the lifelike features of the dental ceramic makes this restorative approach the ultimate in aesthetics.

Lecture: 3:00pm – 4:00pm

Zirconia-Based Restorations: What Have We Learned Ariel Raigrodski, M.S., D.M.D., F.A.C.P., Washington School of Dentistry This presentation will discuss the mechanical and optical properties of Zirconia, as well as the results of clinical studies on Zirconia-based restorations. The program will address the question of how the advent of CAD/CAM technology and various veneering porcelain application techniques may support the fabrication of these restorations. Comprehensive cases will be presented to demonstrate the use of Zirconia-based restorations as part of an interdisciplinary treatment approach. At the conclusion of this session, attendees should be able to: • understand the unique properties of Zirconia, and how they translate to its clinical usage, including results of clinical studies. • describe the techniques and technologies available for fabricating Zirconia-based restorations with the advent of CAD/CAM technology supports. • discuss the advantages and limitations of Zirconia-based restorations.

Lecture: 4:00pm – 4:40pm

The “New Age” Digital Dental Office and Dental Lab: The Digital Dental Team” Edward McLaren, D.D.S., M.D.C., University of California Los Angeles School of Dentistry The new millennium has brought many advances in dental ceramics. None more important than processing techniques using CAD/CAM technology. These technologies have allowed the use of solid sintered Zirconiabased ceramics that could not be used with conventional techniques. Also, existing materials that have been used in pressed glass systems have been developed for use in certain CAD/CAM systems. Thus, today it is possible to generate any type of indirect dental restoration with a CAD/CAM device. This presentation will cover the different types of restoration possibilities - The current possibilities for the boutique digital dental lab and in-office digital dental team, and the clinical and laboratory steps in the process for different types of restorations, along with esthetic enhancements for the use of these ceramics. At the conclusion of this session, attendees should be able to: • utilize “in-office” digital dental team. • perform materials selection based on clinical condition. • utilize preparation guidelines.

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ACP 41st Annual Session Registration Form Westin Kierland Resort & Spa, Scottsdale, Arizona Friday & Saturday, November 4 ă 5, 2011 Mail Registration to: The American College of Prosthodontists, 5198 Eagle Way, Chicago, IL 60678-5198 FAX Registration to: (312) 573-1257 • Website: www.prosthodontics.org/AS Questions? Call Palmeri Publishing Inc.: (905) 489-1970 or (866) 581-8949

Registrant Information Name: ___________________________________________________________________________ Company Name: ___________________________________________________________________ Address: __________________________________________________________________________ City: __________________________________ State/Prov: ______ ZIP/Postal Code: ______________ Phone: _________________________________ Fax: ______________________________________ Email: ___________________________________________________________________________  

Special Needs - If you have a disability as defined by the American Disabilities Act that requires special needs, accomodations or requirements, please check the box and you will be contacted by a staff person. Kosher meal requested

CHECK ONE: Early registration deadline: September 23, 2011. All registration forms postmarked, date stamped or received after September 23, 2011 must include late fee. * Proof of enrollment in a certified dental technician program must accompany registration form. ** 1 max per attendee - includes welcome reception, exhibit hall pass for 2 breakfasts, 2 coffee breaks, 2 light refreshment breaks, special champagne brunch on Friday morning.

2011 Annual Session Registration Fees    

Dental Technician Student* Dental Technician Alliance Members Dental Technician Non-Members Companion***

Before Sept. 23

After Sept. 23 ($100 increase)

$150 $300 $555 $125

$250 $400 $655 $150

Payment Information Total Registration Fees: ___________ Note: Payment must accompany this form or your registration will not be processed.

TYPE OF PAYMENT:

Cheque (Cheques must be made payable to the American College of Prosthodontist, issued in U.S. funds, or registrations will

Visa

not be processed. Cheques returned for insufficient funds will result in a $20 fee.)

Mastercard

Amex

Account Number: ________________________________________ Expiration Date: ______________ Print Name: _____________________________ Signature: __________________________________ By registering for this event, you grant ACP permission to distribute your name and address to all 2011 Annual Session Exhibitors for promotional purposes. By registering for this event, you also grant permission to take photographs during the event and use for future promotional purposes.

PLEASE RETAIN A COPY OF YOUR REGISTRATION FORM FOR YOUR RECORDS. The American College of Prosthodontists is designated as an Approved PACE Program Provider by the Academy of General Dentistry. The formal continuing education programs of this program provider are accepted by AGD for Fellowship, Mastership and membership maintenance credit. Approval does not imply acceptance by a state or provincial board of dentistry or AGD endorsement. The current term of approval extends from 10/19/2010 to 10/31/2014.

ACP 41st Annual Session Scottsdale | November 2 - 5, 2011

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Digital Realities 2011 Digital Restorative Symposium Scottsdale, Arizona November 4 - 5, 2011 Westin Kierland Resort & Spa The American College of Prosthodontists celebrates its 41st anniversary and invites its dental technical partners to the annual ACP event

American College of Prosthodontists & Palmeri Publishing Inc. present an outstanding series of educational lectures on Digital Restorative Dentistry that will prepare you for your success!

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