Martin Kelleher

Specialist in Restorative Dentistry and Prosthodontics, Consultant in Restorative Dentistry, King's College Dental Hospital

email: info@martinkelleher.co.uk

Satisficing in Dentistry. Who decides? Who benefits? Part 3

Examples of ‘maximizing’ in orthodontics include maintaining an unshakable belief that an Angle's Class 1 jaw relationship is the gold standard which ought to be the goal, regardless of what has to be...

Satisficing in dentistry. Who decides? Who benefits? Part 2

Some periodontists might have vested interests in their enthusiastic promotion of their sub-specialty. Traditional ‘maximalist’ periodontists usually advocate the undertaking of detailed assessments,...

‘Satisficing’ in dentistry: who decides? who benefits?

Satisficing is a ‘cognitive heuristic’, which is a posh term in psychology for what most dentists would call a ‘rule of thumb’. Heuristics are shortcuts that our minds take to arrive at an acceptable...

Letters to the editor

The amusing image of Professor Burke ‘eating his hat’ in the January issue1 and his elegantly chosen words about porcelain laminate veneers reminded me that I was partly responsible for the erroneous...

Bleaching Complications: ‘Greening’ in a Post-crowned Tooth

The grey discolouration of the upper right central and lateral incisors along with some poorly contoured composite restorations were noted..

Narcissism, pride, envy, lust and dentistry

Narcissism is named after a mythical Greek character called Narcissus who walked beside a pool of water and stopped to take a drink from it. He saw his own reflection in the water and became...

The ‘satisficing’ additive composite approach to bulimia

Teeth dissolve below a pH of 5.52 and vomited stomach hydrochloric acid has a pH of 1–2 depending on which foods and drinks were consumed during the ‘bingeing’ phase that precedes the vomiting...

Anterior open bites: the additive direct resin composite solution

‘Montgomery consent’ means that any potential patient needs to understand the material risks and benefits of the viable options available to them in order to make their consent valid..

Clinical Tips to Improve the Restorative Management of Hypodontia: Part 2

Clinical challenges that need to be addressed when managing patients with hypodontia include:.

Dens Evaginatus – ‘Addition Beats Subtraction’

The exact aetiology of DE remains unclear and it might be an isolated anomaly. However, it is thought to arise from an aberrant folding of the inner enamel epithelium and subjacent ectomesenchymal...

Written Evidence to a Select Committee

In 2019, a Parliamentary select committee inquiry was established to examine the state of UK dentistry..

‘Selfies’ − an effective communication aid to solve periodontal and implant diseases

Many people are now emotionally attached to their various mobile devices. Many are addicted to their smartphones. Some suffer ‘nomobophobia’, meaning that they get very anxious if they are deprived of...

The Dangers of Social Media and Young Dental Patients' Body Image

Over the past couple of years, ‘fourth-screen’ technology (meaning a small portable video screen such as on a mobile phone) has changed the way young people communicate with each other. Photo and...

Medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ): realities, risks and responsibilities

Many advances in medicine, while they are generally to be welcomed, have led to some unpredicted problems becoming apparent as the ‘law of unintended consequences’7 manifests itself over time and in...