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Impression Material

Dental ImpressionsWhat is that goo?

Whether you need a new denture, braces, or a single inlay restoration, you’ll encounter the “goo” dentists use to make an impression – the first step to a perfect likeness of your mouth.

In effect, the material you bite into registers a “negative” image, like a photograph. To make a positive model, a plaster-like “stone” is poured into the impression and allowed to set. And there you are.

Impression material, to work properly, must reproduce oral structures accurately, and be strong enough to hang together while it’s removed – without sucking out anything in the vicinity by accident. It can’t shrink or expand, either, or the end product (your new bridge, for instance) won’t fit.

And, of course, patients have to tolerate it. (In the “olden” days, some rubber materials had a peculiar sulfur odor, like a day at the mineral springs.)

Different materials are used for different procedures. But any impression takes savvy and practice to give us an ideal working model of you.

About Yuri Kaneda, DDS

Dr. Yuri Kaneda was born in Japan and immigrated to the US when she was 4 years old with her family. She lived in Ohio, Nebraska, and Illinois before finally settling in the San Diego area. A graduate of Bonita Vista High School, she went on to the University of California Berkeley where she obtained her Bachelors in Microbiology and Immunology. After working for 2 years in growth plate research at University of California San Diego, she went to the University of California San Francisco Dental School for her Doctor of Dental Surgery degree. Upon graduation, she returned to San Diego where she worked as an associate in the practice of Drs. Morimoto and Yaryan, her childhood dentist. She then started her own practice in 1995 and has been at her present location since 1999 which happens to be across the street from her high school!

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