Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Nowadays, 3D printing is frequently depicted in the media as a technique that is commonly used to create dental prosthetics. It is an advanced manufacturing technique, often known as additive manufacturing. It involves creating things using a sequence of cross-sectional slices, layer by layer basis. It is built on digital computer-aided design (CAD) models, which employ standardized materials to produce customized 3D things using certain automation procedures. The work of prosthodontist has historically been viewed as time-consuming, arduous, and unpleasant. Digitization has made the practice of prosthodontics a lotsimpler, quicker, and easier because of digitization.This article tries to review, using true data, how 3D printing may now be utilized in prosthetic dentistry and in dental labs.The paper also explores future views and looks at the continued feasibility of conventional dental laboratory services and production methods. Furthermore, it demonstrates the knowledge required for the digital additive fabrication of dental restorations.