ORIGINal e.Max CAD

As promised, Daniel Jung of B&D Dental arrived at our laboratory yesterday for a day of installation and training our staff in the fine art of milling e.Max blue blocks using our Origin Pro 5000.  We scanned and designed a single upper bicuspid using 3Shape, and then loaded the file into the milling software.  Daniel has developed a neat, little jig that enables you to load up to eight blue blocks at once.  Each restoration’s milling strategy is determined, and then you can batch the jobs to run consecutively.  It took a little over 21 minutes to mill the bicuspid, so theoretically you could mill eight restorations in something under three hours.  Okay, that’s a little slower than the Cerec InLab Mc XL, but…

THESE FIT!

I had to do a slight amount of internal adjustment – I think this was due to a combination of the geometry of the preparation and maybe I could have used a little more drill compensation – but the margins were completely closed.  No little gaps that require relining like was so often the issue with the Cerec machine.

I filled the restoration with Ivoclar’s Object Fix and ran a Speed Crystallization.  From start to finish – not counting model & die – the whole process took a little over an hour.  I see real possibilities for situations when time is of the essence.  In fact, we have a case coming up next week for an account who has a friend coming in to town for two days.  We’re going to get the impression Tuesday morning, and the plan is for the crown to be seated late that afternoon.

I hope to photograph the process, and plan on posting the results.  Check back Wednesday or Thursday.

Now, I’m headed to Chicago for the Mid-Winter meeting.  There’s always something new and exciting – I’ll provide updates through out my trip….

© 2010, Jeff Saylors. All rights reserved.

4 Responses to “ORIGINal e.Max CAD” (Leave a Comment)


  1. Jay says:

    As an non-approved milling machine, I would wonder what effect it is having on the material integrity of IPS e.max. Ivoclar has a very strict validation process and thus far, Origin has not been approved for milling IPS e.max. A crown might look great, but does Origin have any information on the flexural strength after milling on THEIR machine?
    Strength values can vary based on the trauma (or lack thereof) that a restorative material goes through during the milling process and until Ivoclar Vivadent OK’s Origin, there is no telling what is happening with that product.

  2. Jeff Saylors says:

    Excellent point. This was a one time deal okayed in advance by the doctor. What’s funny about your comment is questioning the marginal integrity of the material as milled by the Origin machine versus having no marginal integrity whatsoever as milled by the Cerec InLab… As for the “approval process” – I’m willing to bet it has a whole lot more to do with the politics of money than actual results. A large company like Ivoclar is not going to approve B&D because to do so would be to virtually spit in the face of Sirona, Straumann and NobelBiocare. So BillBill, rest assured I won’t be doing anymore such cases – but not because it doesn’t work.

  3. Jay says:

    I said MATERIAL integrity.
    Margins are one thing and I am sure that the Origin machine does just fine with them.
    Material integrity is something entirely different. If a machine is stressing the material during the milling process to the point where its flexural strength is compromised, your perfect margins won’t mean much. Of course no one would ever blame the machine for a failure. It would always fall on the material.

  4. Jeff Saylors says:

    I know what you wrote. My remark was intended as a swipe at the marginal integrity produced by the Cerec InLab machines (I guess you’re alright with letting the luting medium fill in any marginal discrepanicies?). I spoke with an Ivoclar representative about this situation. I was told that each and every mill B&D puts in the market would have to be individually “verified”. Ivocalr evidently made Diadem go through this process with their mills, and I was told it took 6 months and loads of paperwork. However, the Cerec InLab mills are “verified” en masse. I recognize this may have to do with the milling strategies, however it smells more like it has to with money. Its not surprising that Ivoclar has chosen to cut deals with the big boys – Sirona, NobelBiocare, Straumann, and Diadem. However, your suggestion that the milling stategies used by these major players can’t be replicated just doesn’t wash with me.

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