Step One: Occlusal Splints

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What can I do with D3Tool right now?

Make a great occlusal splint.  While the long term vision of D3Tool is a more general purpose and open platform for dental CAD tasks, the clear goal for today is a simple, effective and low cost occlusal splint module.  The resins are there, the printers are there, but until now, the CAD is not there unless you are willing to dive into the professional dental CAD packages.  It’s a wide open hole!  This is why splints and guards have been the aim for an initial release.

What is the workflow?

This is best demonstrated with a time-lapse.  Right now, a simple guard for a reasonably normal occlusal scheme should take about 10 minutes.  Our goal as we refine the workflow is a 3 minute design that has full control over the occlusal scheme (guidance, excursions, disclusion, balance etc).

https://youtu.be/1pXjMkQDfL8

How are the fits?

So good I’m a little nervous. My initial test of about 6 guards have all fit the teeth well with no internal adjustments.  I attribute the excellent fits to the quality of the input data and the quality of current desktop 3d printing technology.  From a CAD point of view, the concept of fit is simple. Subtract the teeth from the desired outer shape with a small offset.  So if the input data is good, and the manufacturing is good, then not much refinement is needed other than choosing your offset.

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How is the occlusion?

Pretty darn good!  The main limitation right now, is that the articulation simulations are dependent on the fidelity of the estimated parameters (condylar inclination, incisal guidance, Bennet angle, facebow mounting).  The occlusal scheme seems to be on par as if you sent physical models to the lab, asked for an average value mounting on a semi-adjustable articulator.  Below is a gallery of my first 4 test splints with no occlusal adjustment.  There is no question that the MIP bite is as good as your bite registration.  The excursions have been very close, but I can tell that in some cases, the average values have not matched the patient perfectly.

https://youtu.be/9llL7CFbYS8

What are the next steps for D3Splint?

The tool is good, but it definitely has the potential to be excellent.  In no particular order, the main developement goals to make this go from a beta to a polished module.

  1. Make the splint perimeter defined on the buccal and palatal. [DONE]
  2. Decrease the amount of sculpting needed, this is the current largest time commitment [IN PROGRESS]
  3.  Automatically generate a “relaxing ramp” that will allow posterior jaw movment [DONE]
  4. Use of lateral and protrusive check bites to establish articulator values
  5. Use an external Boolean engine to reduce errors in the final output step [IN PROGRESS]
  6. Mandibular [DONE], maxillary [DONE], and dual arch [IN PROGRESS] workflows

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Responses

  1. Hello,

    I was about to buy the software 3dSplint but wanted to know if future updates will be free, for how long, etc…

    It would help a lot to trust and solve doubts if it was possible to contact you by email, but unfortunately i could not find any email address on your website.

    Kind regards,

    1. there should be an email address on here. The website has had some big changes lately so we may have misplaced it. All updates to the Splint module are free indefintely for anyone who has already purchased it. That may change for future customers to keep the project sustainable, but until otherwise. For other modules (model work, custom trays, dentures, waxups) which we will pursue once our initial funding goal is reached will not be be included in the D3Splint purchase. The goal is affordable and low cost, but the product has to be sustainable. Sincerely, Patrick

  2. How many computers can the software be installed on per license? I’m thinking three at minimum for my personal needs.

    Thanks, Stan

  3. I’m struggling with the design process for an occlusal splint using the Mac software. I’ve watched several videos online and followed each step using .stl scans on multiple patients and haven’t had any success. Is there a difference between the Mac software vs. Windows? Should I switch?

  4. When designing the occlusal guard does your software open the arches?

    Should the scan of the bite be taken in MIP/CR or with a pre-determined position using blue bite, cotton roll, bite stick etc?

    1. I prefer to scan the bite in an open position. That way I know that the patient actually has that open position. If I try to open the arches in the software, I’m not guaranteed that that position is an actual jaw position. My preference for taking the open bite scan is a single anterior discluding element (leaf gauge, specifically). By using a single anterior stop, I can scan the posterior segments without interferences and the single stop creates uniform spacing. If I use bilateral cotton rolls, the patient can bite differently when I scan each side. I’ve found the leaf gauge to be the most predictable, quickest, repeatable, and economical way to take the bite scan.

  5. Would you consider a virtual articulator that mounts to the HIP For advance TMJ doctors?

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