A traditional radiography is a two-dimensional image of something that actually has three dimensions. At last, thanks to 3D radiological system with a small field of view we have the missing dimension, which exponentially amplifies our knowledge.
The CBCT (Cone Beam Computed Tomography) is a real breakthrough for
dentistry because it offers many advantages: low radiation dose to patients,
high definition with very small voxels, the possibility to see the tooth and the
surrounding structures in three different planes, overcoming any anatomical
overlapping. It opens a new frontier, and allows us to make precise diagnosis
where traditional tools were insufficient.
Reading the text we can see the enthusiasm and the passion with which the
authors have produced this book. Each chapter is a font of information, every
detail has been carefully examined, and each clinical case has been extensively reported.
The introductory chapters provide the reader with the knowledge and basic tools to understand the CBCT. Everything else is an atlas, highly enjoyable, which includes the use of CBCT in both clinical and surgical dentistry, and describes in details not only the diagnostic phase but also the operational use to program the individual case, and control the future outcome.