Directa Dental: Pain-Free Anesthetic = Exponential Practice Growth!
The CALAJECT computer-assisted system controls the flow rate of anesthetic, resulting in less discomfort for patients and a relaxed, comfortable working position for dentists.
Comfortable, painfree patients are happy patients, and happy patients are the key to growing your practice and increasing your workflow. One way to ensure patient comfort—and practice growth—is gentle, pain-free anesthesia administration, and Directa Dental has the answer with CALAJECT.
The CALAJECT computer-assisted system controls the flow rate of anesthetic, resulting in less discomfort for patients and a relaxed, comfortable working position for dentists. The system uses a light pen grip for good finger support, which means the needle is perfectly still in situ. Dentists can adjust program settings for intraligamental and palatal injections, infiltrations, and regional nerve blocks simply by pressing a foot pedal.
Maximum Patient Comfort
The key to patient comfort lies in CALAJECT’s operation—it controls the flow rate so tissue can accept the solution consistently, allowing for maximum patient comfort during the procedure. Without CALAJECT, many dentists find they administer solution too quickly, resulting in patient discomfort from the ensuing “sting” of the anesthetic. CALAJECT’s smooth, computer-assisted operation eliminates that, resulting in a pleasant anesthetic experience for patients and one that can largely be the deciding factor in patient satisfaction and increased referrals.
The system is easy to operate with a simple touch screen that has a display for injection speed and pressure. The flow rate is indicated by an acoustic signal and the tactile handpiece is vibration free. The system includes a separate foot controller, and dentists have visual contact with the cartridge throughout the entire injection.
Cost-Effective, Practice Builder
CALAJECT uses standard dental needles and cartridges, making it a cost-effective option. “It’s definitely a practice builder because I can tell patients about this new technology I have that will mean less painful injections. That’s ultimately one of the greatest fears that patients have—and we’re taking that away while also increasing doctors’ comfort,” said Brett E. Gilbert, DDS, Chicago, IL