American pattern vs English pattern extraction forceps July 16, 2026shahzaib ali Dental extraction forceps are hand instruments that grip a tooth at the neck and use a beak-and-handle lever to loosen it from the alveolar bone and remove it. Each forceps...
Root Tip Forceps vs Root Tip Picks: 7 Clinical Rules for Choosing the Right Instrument July 16, 2026shahzaib ali Root tip forceps vs root tip picks are both root fragment removal instruments, but they solve opposite problems: forceps grasp a fragment that already has an exposed purchase point, while...
Pediatric Extraction Forceps: Types, Numbers, and How to Choose the Right Pair? July 14, 2026shahzaib ali Pediatric extraction forceps are dental instruments made for removing primary (milk) teeth in children. They have shorter beaks, narrower tips, and smaller handles than adult forceps, because a child's teeth,...
Parts of a Dental Forceps (Beak, Hinge, Handle) and How Design Dictates Use July 09, 2026shahzaib ali A dental extraction forceps has four functional parts: the beaks, which grip the tooth root; the hinge (also called the joint), which transmits and multiplies force from the hand to...
How to Identify Extraction Forceps (By Arch, Number, Beak Shape, and Handle Angle) July 08, 2026shahzaib ali To identify an extraction forceps, read four features in order: the handle-to-beak angle (which tells you the arch), the beak shape (which tells you the tooth group), the beak symmetry...
Which Extraction Forceps for Which Tooth? (Complete Maxillary vs Mandibular Reference Guide) July 08, 2026shahzaib ali The correct extraction forceps for a tooth is decided by three factors: the jaw the tooth sits in, the number and shape of its roots, and the design of the...
Dental Forceps Numbering Chart Explained (The Complete #1, #150, #88L/R & Universal Guide) July 07, 2026shahzaib ali Dental forceps numbering is a standardized code that identifies the arch, tooth type, and beak design of an extraction forceps. Each number tells the clinician whether the instrument is for...
Dental Extraction Forceps: #150, #151, #88R, #88L, Cow Horn & Universal July 02, 2026shahzaib ali Dental extraction forceps are hinged surgical instruments that grip and remove teeth from the alveolar bone by functioning as class-1 levers. The six most clinically essential types are Forceps #150...
Large Diameter Dental Instrument Handles: Benefits for Hygienists June 23, 2026shahzaib ali Large-diameter handles lower the pinch force and muscle load a hygienist uses during scaling. A wider grip spreads pressure across more of the hand, so the fingers and thumb work...
Top Dental Practices in the USA: What Sets the Best Apart June 18, 2026shahzaib ali Finding excellent dental care in the United States has never been more important! With more than 200,000 active dental practices across the country, patients face a real challenge: how do...
Ball Burnisher vs. Beaver Tail Burnisher in Restorative Dentistry: A Complete Clinical Guide June 16, 2026shahzaib ali What You Need to Know Before Choosing a Burnisher? In restorative dentistry, a restoration's long-term success is determined not just by the material used or the cavity preparation achieved; it...
Care and Sterilization of Dental Instruments in US Clinics May 07, 2026shahzaib ali Ensure your instruments are sterilized correctly. Explore Hunza Dental’s professional-grade instruments and care guides to maintain safety and efficiency in your clinic.