Research & Reviews: A Journal of Dentistry Cover

Research & Reviews: A Journal of Dentistry

ISSN: 2230-8008

Editors Overview

rrjod maintains an Editorial Board of practicing researchers from around the world, to ensure manuscripts are handled by editors who are experts in the field of study.

Open Access
Special Issue
Topic

Use of the dental operative microscope in restorative dentistry:

Abstract Submission Deadline : November 30, 2024

Manuscript Submission Deadline : December 25, 2024

Special Issue Description

The fundamental standards of restorative dentistry have not changed altogether over the most recent 30 years, but rather aesthetic, biological, and mechanical models are currently more stringently applied by dental specialists. Additionally, this tendency has been enhanced by the speedy advancement of dental materials, equipment, and methods. These days dental specialists do more aesthetic, biomimetic, and predictable medicines that require less seat time with an expanded achievement rate. Microscopes and loupes both have been generally embraced by dental specialists. Magnification can be partitioned in low-magnification (2x-8x), mid-magnification (8x-16x), and high-magnification (16x-25x). Magnifying lenses give movable magnification (magnification range 4x-25x), while most loupes give fixed magnification (magnification range 2.5x-6x). Magnification devices work on immediate and indirect vision and accuracy is fundamentally higher in magnifying lens utilization contrasted with the loupes. Dental loupes are the most ordinarily involved devices for magnification, because of the more reasonable costs and the convenience without significant changes in the functioning convention and ergonomics. There are a few disadvantages that limit the utilization of loupes among dental specialists: absence of fixed position (fine movements of the dental specialist’s head upset the picture of the magnified operating field); the need to change the loupes to accomplish different magnifications. Going against the norm, the utilization of a dental magnifying instrument requires the least change and exertion to decrease postural deviation while working. The growth is clear as of late, perhaps due to the familiarity of dental specialists with dental microscopes which have previously become implied gifts for endodontic trained professionals. Fiber optic lighting is the key variable that supplements the magnification presented by the microscope so medicines can now be performed under expanded well-being conditions and in states fundamentally greater than previously.

Keywords

Magnification, Dental operating microscope, Restorative dentistry, Fiber optic, Dental loupes

Manuscript Submission information

Manuscripts should be submitted online via the manuscript Engine. Once you register on APID, click here to go to the submission form. Manuscripts can be submitted until the deadline.
All submissions that pass pre-check are peer-reviewed. Accepted papers will be published continuously in the journal (as soon as accepted) and will be listed together on the special issue website. Research articles, review articles as well as short communications are invited. For planned papers, a title and short abstract (about 100 words) can be sent to the email address:[email protected] for announcement on this website.
Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a Double-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for the submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page.

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rrjod

Since

2010

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