Cutting-Edge Center for Digital Dentistry Education, Treatment and Research Opens at Stony Brook University School of Dental Medicine

Pictured from left: Dr. Robert Reiner, Clinical Associate Professor; Carol Sloane, Assistant Dean for Clinical Operations; Dr. Allan Kucine, Associate Dean for Information Technology; Axel Calderon, Manager of the Center for Implant and Digital Technology; Cary Staller, Stony Brook Foundation and SUNY Trustee; Dr. Michael Bernstein, Stony Brook University Interim President; Dr. Kenneth Kaushansky, Senior Vice President of the Health Sciences and Dean of the Renaissance School of Medicine; Dr. Mary R. Truhlar, Dean; Dr. Ann Nasti, Associate Dean for Clinical Education; Dr. Steven Zove, Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs; Dr. Rafael Delgado-Ruiz, Associate ProfessorThe addition of Stony Brook University School of Dental Medicine’s Center for Implant and Digital Technology is the latest for the School in a string of advances in digital dentistry.

December 2019 – With the cutting of a ceremonial ribbon, Stony Brook School of Dental Medicine officially opened the doors to its Center for Implant and Digital Technology (CIDT). The Center will serve as state-of-the-art space for digital dentistry-focused education, patient care, and research.

“The Center not only enhances patient care,” remarked Stony Brook University Interim President Michael Bernstein at the December 5th opening event. “It also invites invaluable training opportunities for the next generation of dental medicine leaders.” This training, he explained, will also include high-tech, collaborative research.

The addition of the Center for Implant and Digital Technology is a natural next step in a long line of success within digital dentistry for the School of Dental Medicine. Notably, in 2017, the School was selected as one of five academic institutions nationally by the American College of Prosthodontists to pilot a digital dentistry curriculum.

Now, the innovational curriculum is fully implemented, and students will have full access to the latest technological advances in computer-aided design and manufacturing (CAD/CAM) within the Center. As a result, students receive advanced hands-on training and enter into professional practice having immense experience providing the most current care options.

Importantly, as Long Island’s largest oral healthcare provider, the School of Dental Medicine’s addition of the Center increases access to CAD/CAM technologies for its 15,000 patients and the community. Whereas traditional dental restorations were time-consuming and made using uncomfortable impression trays, the entire process can now be done digitally – and quickly – within the Center.

From start to finish, the creation of crowns and bridges can now be completed entirely onsite, and in less than 24-hours, starting with non-invasive, high-tech scanners used to electronically capture images of a patient’s teeth and gums in real-time. From there, information is digitally transferred, and dental practitioners design and then 3-D print or mill dental restorations for delivery to the patient.

Visitors to the School of Dental Medicine’s ribbon-cutting ceremony were able to view this process first-hand through student-led guided tours and demonstrations. Student Shradha Duggal also invited those in attendance to hear an overview of ongoing research, an essential component of the Center.

“I believe that through digital dentistry, I can make a difference in treating patients with craniofacial anomalies,” explained Duggal. Duggal is currently studying 3-D printed prosthetic devices used to correct the defects of the lip and palate in terms of more efficiently and comfortably treating patients.

Other research projects underway at the School of Dental Medicine include the generation of data that will be used to improve the design and performance of dental implants and the review of data acquisition and processing. Each project is poised to impact patient care directly.

“This new Center will allow for transformational research by clinicians and students, and it will improve patient care through the use of digital scans and 3-D printing,” said Dr. Kenneth Kaushansky, Senior Vice President of the Health Sciences and Dean of the Renaissance School of Medicine. “Such technological innovation continues our progression as a national leader in digital dentistry.”

The Center for Implant and Digital Technology is one of the many innovative infrastructure developments recently completed or underway at the School of Dental Medicine, including the expansion and update of an endodontic suite and a modernization of clinical bays. “The School of Dental Medicine is constantly improving its educational, patient care, and research spaces to better support its mission,” explained Dr. Mary R. Truhlar, Dean. “The addition of the Center for Implant and Digital technology is an investment in our present and our future."

Additional photos of the Center for Implant and Digital Technology's ribbon-cutting ceremony.
 

Stony Brook University's Interim Provost Minghua Zhang practices digital scanning at the Center for Implant and Digital Technology.
Stony Brook University's Interim Provost Minghua Zhang practices digital scanning under the guidance of student Yigit Gol. 
Stony Brook University School of Dental Medicine student Shradha Duggal explains her research in the Center for Implant and Digital Technology
Student Shradha Duggal explains her research conducted within the Center for Implant and Digital Technology.
Stony Brook University School of Dental Medicine student Nicole Andriano explains 3-D printing capabilities within the Center for Implant and Digital Technology.
Student Nicole Andriano explains 3-D printing capabilities within the Center for Implant and Digital Technology.