Dental autoclaves are a must-have for any practice looking to execute infection control best practice. Autoclaves are key to ensuring all dangerous microbes are wiped from dental instruments and handpieces before being reused. As easy as it is to recognise how fundamental autoclaves are, what’s not as easy is working out which one is best suited to the needs of your practice. The best autoclaves are those that combine all the essential features for convenient sterilization with a few nice-to-haves at a fair price.
Autoclaves are not cheap. You will never find a quality B Class autoclave for anything less than £1000 and prices can go as high as £8000. B class autoclaves (vacuum sterilizers) are the most suitable machines for dental practices in accordance with European Standard 13060.
Regardless of what end of the price range you are looking, there are some boxes that all good systems should tick. These include:
A simple definition of CAD/CAM dentistry is the use of digital software to design and manufacture dental restorations and prostheses. CAD stands for computer-aided design and CAM stands for computer-aided manufacturing. The technology can be used to create crowns, dentures, inlays, onlays, bridges and veneers among other things. The speed of the CAD/CAM process allows for dental prosthetics to be designed, manufactured and delivered to the patient in quick time, sometimes the same day. The wider system of using computer assisted technologies to produce restorations is known as CEREC (Chairside Economical Restoration of Aesthetic Ceramics).
Along with being one of the world’s fastest B class autoclaves, the Enbio S comes with the following benefits:
In just 5 years, the number of dentists using Enbio autoclaves has grown to over 20,000 users worldwide.
Despite its outstanding spec, the Enbio S Autoclave also happens to be one of the lowest price units on the market.
A simple definition of CAD/CAM dentistry is the use of digital software to design and manufacture dental restorations and prostheses. CAD stands for computer-aided design and CAM stands for computer-aided manufacturing. The technology can be used to create crowns, dentures, inlays, onlays, bridges and veneers among other things. The speed of the CAD/CAM process allows for dental prosthetics to be designed, manufactured and delivered to the patient in quick time, sometimes the same day. The wider system of using computer assisted technologies to produce restorations is known as CEREC (Chairside Economical Restoration of Aesthetic Ceramics).