15/05/2026
Efficiency in implant dentistry is not about rushing — it is about reducing unnecessary steps.
Fewer interventions, clearer protocols, and a system designed for predictable workflows can make a measurable difference for both the practice and the patient.
One important workflow concept is immediate implantation, which involves placing the implant in the same session as the extraction. When the clinical situation allows, this approach can help avoid additional surgical procedures and shorten the overall treatment pathway compared with delayed protocols.
SDS SWISS DENTAL SOLUTIONS ceramic implants support an efficiency-driven approach through system design choices:
• Tissue-level tulip design — positioned to support soft-tissue attachment and reduce micro-gap-related concerns at the critical crestal zone, with the aim of minimizing bacterial ingress at the interface.
• “Prepable” intraoral customization — implant tops/posts can be adjusted directly in the patient’s mouth, analogous to tooth preparation. This may reduce dependence on additional prosthetic components and maintain the flexibility of restorative workflows.
• Lean component logic: fewer prosthetic parts can simplify handling, reduce stock-keeping, and increase day-to-day workflow efficiency.
From a broader efficiency perspective, SDS also describes treatment concepts designed to minimize the number of surgical interventions, often aiming to consolidate steps into a single procedure, where appropriate.
Bottom line: When indication, planning, and ex*****on align, immediate protocols combined with a workflow-oriented ceramic implant system can support time-efficient, cost-effective treatment planning without adding complexity.
Find out more in our Blog!