This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.
Congratulations! Your order qualifies for free shipping You are $30 away from free shipping

The Evolution of Dentistry: From Traditional Techniques to Modern Innovations

Introduction

Dentistry has evolved remarkably over the years, blending tradition with technology to deliver better outcomes for patients. From advancements in prosthodontics to the emergence of groundbreaking products like microhydroxyapatite toothpaste tablets, today’s dental care offers more personalized, efficient, and effective solutions than ever before.

How has dentistry evolved to benefit patients today?

From digital technology like CAD/CAM systems to innovative treatments using microhydroxyapatite, modern dentistry focuses on precision, efficiency, and holistic health.

💡Related Post: Electric vs. Manual: What’s the Best Toothbrush for You?

Video Embed

 

Key Questions and Answers

  1. What makes microhydroxyapatite a game-changer in dental care?
    Microhydroxyapatite is a natural component of tooth enamel. Unlike fluoride, it integrates seamlessly into the teeth, filling microscopic gaps and reducing sensitivity while avoiding synthetic additives.

  2. How has technology transformed dentistry?
    Advancements like CAD/CAM systems allow dentists to design and manufacture dental restorations with precision and speed, improving patient comfort and reducing procedure times.

  3. Why is oral health connected to overall health?
    Regular dental cleanings reduce systemic inflammation, lowering the risk of cardiovascular and other diseases. Oral health impacts overall well-being.

  4. What role does prosthodontics play in modern dentistry?
    Prosthodontics addresses complex dental issues, including full-mouth restorations and helping patients recover from trauma or illness. It’s the cornerstone of advanced restorative care.

  5. What’s the impact of mentoring and continued education in dentistry?
    Mentorship and ongoing learning are vital for growth, equipping dentists with the latest techniques and knowledge to provide superior patient care.

Conclusion

The world of dentistry is evolving, blending innovative technology with proven techniques. Products like microhydroxyapatite toothpaste tablets highlight the move toward safer, more effective solutions.

Take control of your oral health and experience the benefits of modern care—Shop ENML’s Toothpaste Tablets today and elevate your dental routine.

Transcript

You were prepping like a number two or something and you nixed the buckle fat pad. Oh, and you're going to scare people. It's great. I think it's, I think it's a cosmetics course. Um, and then, uh, he became what's called my team leader. Okay. Um, so we were team 007. Okay. He's a huge Bond fanatic. Yep. And, uh, and so we all had, uh, team 007 pens made, uh, cause he was my team leader for the last two years.

License to drill. License to drill. The whole thought process of how we do dentistry has changed because in the past we would take impressions of things and then cast things up in metals and gold and other things and try them in and have all these other fittings. And nowadays we can design things on the computer with people that don't get regular dental care Are more prone to cardiovascular disease and all other types of diseases because they have inflammation in their body So just the simple welcome to minty fresh takes presented by enamel The podcast where we explore the latest trends science and personal stories behind oral wellness I'm your host xander and today We have a jam packed show covering some of the most important topics in oral care.

From celebrities to experts in the field, you're sure to hear dentistry content done in a fun way. So sit back, grab your popcorn and your floss, because you'll need it after, and enjoy this conversation. Thanks for listening. Today we have Dr. Tom Dork with us in studio. Dr. Dork comes from Manhattan, learning about his love of dentistry at a young age of five.

Instead of pursuing his potential comic career with a friendship of Stan Lee, he decided, like his father, to become a dentist. After his undergrad at the University of South Carolina, he transitioned to studying dentistry at Fairleigh Dickinson in New Jersey. After that, he joined his father's clinic in Manhattan and quickly realized he wanted more studying, so he headed back to Fairleigh Dickinson to specialize in prosthodontics.

Upon completion of this, he created his practice in Jupiter, Florida, called Aesthetic Dental of Jupiter. With unbelievable success over 20 plus years serving some of the world's biggest stars, he transitioned to teaching at Nova Dental School in Fort Lauderdale, where he met Dr. Jordan Harper, which is where we pick up today.

What are some of the things, give us, give us one, Aspect of dentistry that you absolutely love being able to impact Families and individuals through that well a big part of my practice was doing cosmetic dentistry. And um, I took care of regular people as well as models and actors and As we were talking about off camera Um, the biggest thrill that I had in dentistry was being able to change Self images for people.

I mean, when you're able to take somebody who's really concerned with how they look and is very self conscious and you're able to make them into a different person, you can see their eyes light up. It's, it's thrilling to be able to do that type of service for somebody where it just changes lives. Dr.

Harber, same question for you. Yeah, for me, it's, it's, um, you know, I would say some aspect of that is, is obviously there, um, he did more of it than I get a chance to do. But, um, for me, it's like, my practice is like my little flock, you know, and, and I like taking care of the flock and catching up with them every six months and seeing how their Europe trip went.

And, uh, I love working on my hands. So, so I get to meld those worlds of, you know, taking care of people and, uh, and work on my hands, uh, from the surgical aspect. It's fun. Yeah. Now, when you guys met. You guys were both at Nova dental school. You were teaching obviously in Fort Lauderdale. You were teaching and obviously you were a student.

What, what class did we meet? What was the first class? Do you remember the exact? Yeah. So, so he, he taught a cosmetics course. Um, and then, uh, he became what's called my team leader. Okay. Um, so we were team 007, a huge Bond fanatic and, uh, and so we all had a team 007 pens made, uh, cause he was my team leader for the last two years.

License to drill, license, license to drill. And, uh, and yeah, that's, that's, you know, we had very common interests, you know, uh, we were into the same kind of genres of movies and shows. That's right. And, uh, I think the first time we really bonded was he found out that I also had a toy collection of Transformers.

Okay. And he had a toy collection of Transformers and other action figurines and stuff like that. Okay. I was like, oh, so we're both nerds. This is great. Yes, we definitely nerded out. Okay. So Jordan would come up to me with a project or something like that and he, he would first hit me with, Some sort of Star Wars, uh, story or something like that.

And I'd be like, okay, we're nerds. We can bond over that. And all of a sudden we developed a friendship, you know, both personally and professionally. So, well, that's fantastic. And we know obviously that, well, actually the listeners might not know this, that there were some extracurricular movies that came about, obviously this friendship that, that you guys might get a chance to see here coming up in the near future, or at least some cutaways from it.

Right. Um, but in, in Dale's school, you know, obviously you taught, how long did you teach it? Five years. Five years, five years. Um, and, and, you know, over and throughout the course of seeing new students be able to come in, what was it about Jordan that obviously, aside from the, from the, uh, similar interest outside, what was it about Jordan that you found that you're like, okay, this dad's going to be a fantastic?

Um, well, you could just tell from his personality that, you know, how outgoing is and how funny is to be around that he was going to be somebody special. I mean, he had a fantastic hands and he was the type of student that you really didn't have to explain something to more than once. Catches up pretty quickly.

I was just gonna say, I try. And the other part of, I like about him is that he's so humble. So let me ask you this being in, in the dentistry field for over the last, you know, 20 years at minimum, what are some, uh, some things that you're seeing currently to today? that was still practiced 20, 30 years ago, that's still a fantastic process for being able to aid um, people in, in, in still continuing to improve their oral, oral care.

What a great question. Well, before we were talking about what's new, but what's old, I mean, basically we're still doing the same thing. The, the concept in, in dentistry is that, um, your, trying to take care of the whole person. And, and when we're taking care of people in dentistry, we've discovered scientifically that, um, oral health is connected to a whole body health.

Yeah. So, um, just the very fact that you go in to get a simple cleaning with us, you're not only taking care of your mouth, but you're also taking care of the entire system of your body. Yeah. So, uh, people that, that, Don't get regular dental care are more prone to cardiovascular disease and all other types of diseases because they have inflammation in their body.

So just the simple aspect of doing a cleaning lowers the amount of inflammation in your body. And it's a huge. A huge thing for your health that people don't even take into consideration. So even some of the simple things we do in dentistry have profound effects on people. Yeah. Dr. Harper, same question for you as well.

I've only been a dentist for 10 years, so I can't speak to the, to the decades old type thing. But, um, You know, the concept of, of, you know, how we're trying to save the teeth, uh, you know, the advent in the last 100 years of, of not just cosmetic dentistry, but our, you know, prosthodontic work from a fixed standpoint with implants and crowns and bridges and those types of things.

The whole goal is. Get you to the grave with all your teeth. Yeah, right Or at least as many teeth as you possibly can and that concept hasn't changed The technology has obviously even since i've just been out of school has drastically improved. Yeah um, you know paradigm shifts in materials and and and technology that allows us to do our Our dentistry better, more precise and faster, you know, um, which is great for patients and us too.

And that's the one thing that we were talking about off camera was the improvements that you've seen from when you got started early on to where dentistry is today. Could you kind of walk us through the benefits of some of the things that we're seeing now? Well, um, In the olden days, you know, when I was younger as a dentist, um, we didn't have, um, implants.

So the fact that we have implants that work and work successfully in high 90 percentiles, incredible. Cause there's very few medical procedures that work that well. Yeah. So, um, we're able to replace teeth that we weren't able to do before. So when I was first trained, we tried to save. Every little thing that we could in the patient's mouth, and that philosophy has changed to where if you feel like you can't, uh, successfully replace something in a high 90th percentile, then you go to implants, which is a huge change and, you know, paradigm shift.

So, I mean, I don't think Jordan was even exposed to what I was trained in perio in perioprosthetics. Yeah. We're, we're, we're. Every little root, every little piece of tooth was tried to be saved and with crowns we would rehabilitate the mouth. That type of theory has kind of gone out the window and now that we have implants.

We kind of jump into that. One of the things that we talked about before is that even our whole thought process of how we do dentistry has changed because in the past we would take impressions of things and then cast things up in metals and gold and other things and try them in and have all these other fittings.

And nowadays we can design things on the computer with CAD CAM and even have things, it's kind of, like I said to you before, it's kind of like time travel, you can have things done before, you can have the patient there. So it's, it's, it's really interesting and very exciting to have, at least in my lifetime, to have been able to see three different ways of doing dentistry.

And, you know, it's, it's, it's fun, even, uh. Just to see what what's gonna happen next is very exciting. Yeah, and Dr. Harper same question for you I know that you had said even over the last decade of you coming out from where we are to today Yeah, I think you know just the big advance we've had in the last 10 years since I've been out as the digital technology You know when I was in dental school at Nova we were fortunate to have The very expensive CAD cam, uh, capture systems and digital impression and mills and all that stuff.

And, and I would help teach that. Yeah, it did. It did. And, and back for an old guy back then, we still had like, uh, you started to spray like a powder on the tooth when you did a crown prep to capture it in the camera, but now the cameras are so good and so much smaller and so much faster and so much more accurate.

Yeah, no, that's even needed. Just try the tooth and go real quick. And it takes, you know, 3, 000 pictures in a minute and a half and you're done. Oh yeah. Um, it's, it's a fascinating, you know, and it's, and it's precise down to the hundreds of a millimeter, you know, it's, it's, it's amazing precision. And so that aspect I think is what really transforms the patient experience.

It makes it easier on them, easier on us. Um, it makes everybody happier. Everyone's already miserable to go to the dentist. We know that. Um, so, so. We're just trying to, as Dennis, make this process a little easier for you, you know, uh, so that you may like us and not hate us. Now, let me ask you this. So after your four years at Fairleigh Dickinson in New Jersey, you went back and you worked with your dad for a year and you quickly realized you said, I need some more school.

Right. And so you went back to Finley Dickinson and you measured, you specialized, I don't know if measured is the correct term, but I would say you specialize. Right. You specialize in prosthodontics. Correct. For the average person that's watching you, could you kind of go into a little bit of detail about what prosthodontics is?

Um, prosthodontics is a field in dentistry where we do more sophisticated dentistry than the average general dentist would do. So we have more background in taking care of people's bites, taking care of Um, large cases where you might do every single tooth in a person's head, um, a small percentage of it is taking care of people after they've had cancer treatment and might have lost part of the bony structure of their face.

And we're able to, um, try to, um, replace that and try to help them eat better and function better and speak better. Um, it's just, I liken it to, um, like a super dentist where we just have a little bit more training than the average dentist has. Okay. You had said there's only what, 5, 000? I think there's five to 8, 000 of us in the country.

So, I mean, a lot of people, when you're at a party have, and they ask you what you do, they, they think you do root canals or they think you do gum surgery or whatever. And I, I don't correct them. So it's just, that's right. So quick question for you, obviously with you studying for as long as you have it practicing for as long as you have, do you have any stories that, that would make the average person listening to this go?

Wow. That's, that's incredible. Or maybe even laugh. I have a great one. No, you go first. So he told me about it was your first week out of dental school and it was like you were prepping like a number two or something and you nixed the buckle fat path. Oh, and you're going to scare people. It's great. I think it's, I think it's, I mean, it all worked out.

It's all fine. It was like, Oh, what was this? I think it was good. So there is no dentist that likes to work on tooth number two. And what that is, is it's an upper molar in the back. And it's, it's on the side that's closest to them. So it's really hard to see. And you were attracting the, the cheek and it's indirect vision because you can't.

turn and look at this. It's really hard to do that. And there are some people that have really fat cheeks and really curious tongues that go up there while you're using the drill. That's right. So you're having to protect the cheek. You're having to protect their tongue and they're breathing heavily into your mirror and they're salivating.

And it's really hard to do. It doesn't matter how much experience you have. It's incredibly hard to do. So, um, how often, not because you're offered, how often would you see this? It's really funny. Sometimes you don't see it very often and then all of a sudden that's all you're doing for weeks at a time.

Yes. So like, how does that happen? I don't have a question. Why did I do this? Two, two, two. So a lot of dentists go, Oh, we'll just watch that. I'm not working on that. Okay. So at any rate, um, and actually this, this was further on in my career. It was actually working on somebody where I was doing a huge case and they were a person that was kind of intimidating to work on, but at any rate, um, they were like, uh, I'm not allowed to say what they were, but anyway, so, um, I'm working on this and all of a sudden looks like a bunch of yellow pillows fall down into the patient's mouth.

And I look at the assistant who's actually, I had been in practice already for, you know, 20 plus years. And the assistant that I was working with was even more experienced than me. So I look at her and there's this So I do what I normally do. I, I tell the patient, let's take a break. I have to go take a look at a hygiene patient.

And I run to my, my phone and I call up my oral surgeon and I describe what happened. And he goes, Oh, that's the buccal fat pad. You've nicked part of the cheek. A little hole was created and a piece of fat fell into the mouth. And I'm like, okay, what am I supposed to do? So he's like, Okay. Irrigate out from where it came from.

So we used, um, Paradex to clear it out and put it back in and sutured it up and continue to work. But that's, you know, that was a first for me. Oh my gosh. I bet that scared you to death. It did. It took me a while to recover. But then I had to continue working on the rest of the patient's mouth because this was not just number two.

I was doing their entire mouth at that time. Wow. Wow. Wow. And just for everybody listening, um, Dr. Dork has worked on some very high profile Clients, um, not only from his dad being in Manhattan and working amongst all of the, the high profile movie stars. Um, but obviously as he brought his practice down to Jupiter, that did not change.

So that also was the case for him as well. So that is an incredible story. And I, I find that, um, You know, for, for somebody like yourself that, you know, like you said, that does it every day. I'm sure it's not very often that you go, Oh my God. Oh my goodness. That is, that is incredible. Dr. Robert, do you have any stories?

I mean, yeah. So, so I have, I have probably two that people would find interesting. One is a similar to his, like we were working on the lower arch. And the patient decided to swallow. And as they swallowed, their tongue slipped past my mirror while my hand piece was at 400, 000 RPMs. And I lacerated the four of the mouth.

Um, and you could see everything on the floor of the mouth, muscle attachments, salivary glands, the whole deal. And, um, and so I had to end up placing, you know, I, you know, the patient, uh, fortunately it was numb, so I didn't feel anything when this transpired, but Not good. Just transpired. And I said, yeah, you just swallowed into my hand piece.

Really? Sorry about that. Uh, it happens when you swallow and, uh, you, your tongue gets past my mirror. So I had to suture them up and they're fine. You know, a little, a little uncomfortable for a week, but they're fine. Just, just to let you know, that happens often. It does happen. And a lot of times you can't suture up the mouth and it just has to fill back.

It just has to fill back in. Fortunately, it's not an error. I mean, it's uncomfortable, but fortunately for the patient, it's, it's not. Yes. I had a cause of, it looks horrible. Yeah, you change your underwear after you do that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You definitely take the lust breaker early. Yeah. And I can't, I can't reiterate what he said enough.

It's like, it's like, I, I'm so happy and glad that I'm a dentist, but no one can prepare you for how difficult it is. Yeah. Like, and there's, there's, I feel like a lack in the general public of the appreciation of like just how difficult this is. Smart surgeons, they went to school and they put their patients to sleep when they operate on them.

And then here we are as dentists, the idiots of the crew, we're like, you know what? No, let's do it all awake. That sounds like a great idea. And it's difficult, man. It's it's your mirrors fogging. You're, you're trying to do something with indirect vision. There is no room, there's saliva everywhere. And we're doing something where we need it dry.

And like, it's just. It's chaos and we're trying to do this every single day on every single tooth and um, you know It's just it's a very difficult profession Let me ask you this for future dentists coming out just to give them a little bit of a hope obviously for two successful guys I've been in the field for a long time When did you guys start feeling comfortable as a dentist?

Like at what point did you go? Okay, i'm i'm pretty good at this Maybe it was early on in school, but but at some point like you were talking about how i'll go i'll go first I'll go first. I was blessed to have him as a team leader. Yeah Um, I did more units of crown and bridge than anyone in my class of 130 Um, and that's largely because of him because I was able to get tons of great experience.

So I had tons of confidence coming out of school that my classmates maybe didn't have. Still, it takes you, you, you, a lot of people will know what they're doing. Some people need to go to GPRs for an extra year to really understand, like, get a better grasping feel. Yeah. I, I came out of school knowing exactly what I wanted to do.

I didn't want to do root canals. I didn't want to play some plants, you know, I didn't want to do orthodontics. I didn't do everything. I just wanted to do bread and butter dentistry and, and focus on restoring implants, large cases. He taught me a lot. So I felt like I had a lot of confidence in large cases.

And so for me though, I would say about that second or third year, March, you really hit a stride. Yeah. Um, and then it's probably by, I think every year that ticks by, you get faster and more proficient at what you do. Yeah. And it's like by year. Seven, eight, you've hit like max speed. I feel like that you can get, I mean, to do something well, uh, and not, you know, hack somebody up, but like do it well, get it done fast.

I think that's seven, eighth year mark. You're like really hitting your prime and stride. And also too, you've had seven, eight years of doing continuing education, right? So you've had seven to eight more years of like continuing to learn and advance your skills and get better. And you've seen more things, right?

Like practice makes perfect. There's a reason to call it. Medicine is practice because we as the providers, you can only learn so much from a textbook. A lot of it is, is all about experience. Right. And, um, at that 70 year mark, you've seen a lot of interesting, unique, weird things. Um, you've seen teeth behave in ways that textbooks don't, you know, don't help you learn how to do.

So you really are equipped to be like, you know, understand the biology and the common sense that comes behind a lot of teeth and how they behave. And then sometimes teachers don't behave with common sense. It's just annoying, you know, and the patient wants an answer and it's okay to say, I don't know.

And you learn that, you learn that, uh, quickly. Yeah. And you have to have the confidence to be able to say, I don't know. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, absolutely. Cause when you're younger, you want to be able to have the answer for everything and you don't have the answer for everything. When did you feel like you hit a stride as a prosthodontist?

Cause you have a lot more going on. Um, It's interesting. I agree with what you're saying. I think over time, I think how I look at my career is like every five years. You're amazed at how much better that you you've gotten like at year five, you think, Oh, wow, I'm pretty good. And then all of a sudden year 10, you went, wow, I really thought I was good at year five, how much better you get, and then you get better and better and better as time goes on.

And what he was saying is really important. I think. At the beginning, you know, the dental schools try to give you the clinical skills, but you develop that judgment from experience as time goes on. It's so valuable that you don't have it, have at the beginning. Um, and, and the, the other thing that isn't talked about very much is you kind of like suffer from this, um, Impostor, uh, syndrome where you think you're never good enough.

That's right. So like, if you're really the type of person, that's a type A personality where you want everything to be perfect. Um, and if you're talking about with, with a young dentist, you know, you have to avoid that. You know, that's, that's, that's a stressful thing. Everything doesn't have to be absolutely perfect.

Everything has to be very good. Excellent. But. Perfection is very hard to get to in anything. In fact, you can never get to perfection. So for a younger person, that's what I would say to them is try to avoid that trap and just try to get to be a better version of yourself every year. Go for continuing education like he does.

Continue to work on your skills. Seek out older practitioners that you know that are really good at what they do, pick their brains. And it's an ongoing thing where it's an evolution where you get better and better over time. And it's much more fun just like in life to try to improve yourself. Don't compare yourself to everybody else.

That's right. It's just for yourself. Yeah. And get better and better and better. And there's, you know, there's also, um, I considered myself the, um, the 7 percent and the 7 percent is the type of people that want to get better and better want to get continuing education. And then when they do have. A certain level of skill.

They want to give that skill and mentor other people. And, and it's important to be able to give back. To your professional like that and I think too as a young dentist It's important to have a like mentor to look up to because like I I distinctly remember a couple times I would have a patient in the chair and i'm texting him x rays and and internal images and i'm like hey look Do you think this tooth salvageable and he would you know, call me and go listen in my day Everything was salvageable.

So yes, just make sure you do x y and z and it'll make it happen and it was great It's a great learning experience, you know, because At the day, our goal is to save as many teeth as possible, and it helps having that perspective of like, you know, because there's a new dentist. You don't know. Okay, well.

You know, the feral is so small and we only have this much to structure left. Is this going to realistically last for five or 10 years? You know, and that's our goal, right? We don't want to take people's money and have something break in a year or two. That's not cool. Yeah. And so we want people to get there's money.

They're bang for the buck. Right. And, um, you don't really know that until you get out and see what works and what doesn't work in your hands. We really didn't get too much into the fluoride versus micro hydroxy appetite conversation. Um, and I really would love to get your kind of high points on the impact that you see in the difference of route between fluoride and the microhydroxy apatite.

And then obviously with enamel and what we're building here with the brand new product, you know, maybe touch on a microhydroxy apatite, which you're seeing the benefits of using that in your toothpaste. I think, I think the major benefit right now is that today everybody's concerned about fluoride. Yeah.

So, um, you know, if you're worried about what you're going to be putting into your mouth and in your system, I think by using, um, the micro hydroxyapatite, I think that you're putting in a very inert substance in your body that's super helpful for you. Um, and I think that's the major advantage of your product.

Wouldn't you agree with that? No, a hundred percent. I think it's just like, I think after like when COVID hit, people started thinking about what they put in their bodies more. You know, um, that's that's at least what I perceive with my patients You know like people people generally like before maybe people wouldn't grab that food or grab that medicine or grab whatever the toothpaste and You know, look at the ingredient list ever i'm guilty.

I was guilty of that too. Um, and then now, you know It's, it's having them with different, you know, oils, you know, the vegetable oils and that type of stuff. And, um, fluoride is just kind of the, the, the latest victim of that, of that, um, that result, how does biscuits and gravy fall into that? I can't give up a business.

I'm from the South, man. It's just the best, you know, it's just the best. So, so what we're saying is everything in moderation. I think that's right. But that's right. And I think that's the biggest thing that I've learned, obviously, So the podcast with you guys, um, is, you know, knowing that, uh, like you're talking about everything in moderation, there is no one right way to do something.

We'd recommend two minutes every single time you brush, you recommend, you know, flossing once a day, you know, you know, using the two place tabs, using the microhydroxia tab, but there's not, there's not this one right way and only way to do things specifically in dentistry. But it's just making sure, obviously.

That I come back as a patient every six months to come see you guys and make sure that obviously I'm, I'm maintaining my mouth and doing what I need to. And obviously with the microhydroxyapatite, it seems like that is a superior product that's now in the market that will be better to help you maintain down the road.

Yeah. Yeah. Cause ultimately the oral health, you know, we only see you twice, you know, we only see you twice a year for most people. It's only twice a year. For the most part, we're seeing you twice a year. So the, uh, the, the, the buck stops with you, but it's up to the patient to take care of their own oral health at home.

That's right. That's the important thing. That's right. Well, Dr. Doerr, thank you so much for being on the show. We really appreciate it. Thanks for having me. It's been fun. I know. I think I can speak for both of you. We would love to get you back on another show anytime. That's great. And then really get into the nuts and bolts of, of dentistry and maybe some more stories.

So that sounds great. Thank you so much. We appreciate it. We look forward to the next show. Thanks again. Awesome. Hey guys. Thanks so much for tuning into another episode of minty fresh takes presented by enamel. Listen, we all know people that are into the latest trends for their oral care. We also know people on the other side of the spectrum that are not.

This show is made for both of those people. And so if you could do us the absolute biggest favor and share this, like, comment, subscribe, but make, make, make sure to share this with your friends on both sides of the spectrum and somebody right in the middle, that would be awesome. Our biggest mission here Not only doing this podcast, but with all the products and the dentistry here in NYSL is to ensure the trust and the quality of product that we continually offer to our patients.

Our mission through this show and through our brand new product enamel is to ensure that your teeth are being covered by nutrients that actually benefit your teeth, i. e. micro hydroxyapatite. Our toothpaste tablets that we have right here, toothpaste tablets and the luxury mouthwash tablets. These are both available at enamel.

com that is E N M L dot com. And if you're looking for more information on micro hydroxy appetite, feel free to check out our latest YouTube videos. Like we said earlier, make sure to subscribe to this channel. You don't want to miss anything that we have coming out and thanks so much for watching. We'll see you on the next show.