57th Annual Colonel Allyn D. Burke Memorial Dental Symposium

Friday, June 24 - Saturday, June 25, 2022
09:00 a.m. - 04:00 p.m.
Add to Calendar 2022-06-24 09:00:00 2022-06-25 16:00:00 57th Annual Colonel Allyn D. Burke Memorial Dental Symposium Friday and Saturday, June 24 – 25, 2022 Monterey Conference Center, Monterey, CA Stanley Liu, MD, DDS Rebecca Moazzez, BDS, MSc, PhD Gary K. Roberts, DDS Andrew Young, DDS, MSD Day 1: Friday, June 24, 2022 Form and Function: Comprehensive Care of the Facial and Dental Trauma Patient Stanley Liu, MD, DDS; Gary K. Roberts, DDS Traumatic facial injury is perhaps the best example of the need to restore both form and function for patients. Bite, breathing and beauty can all be severely deranged, and an ill-planned repair exacerbates the loss or limitation to function. Virtual surgical planning, 3D printing with additive manufacturing and various systems have made it possible for us to gain minimally invasive access today. Sound fundamental knowledge of the facial bone and muscles remains critical. To achieve goals that our patients deserve, it takes practitioners with a diverse spectrum of expertise working together for a well-coordinated recovery effort. Restoration of function from the reconstruction of form remains at the essence of facial and dental interventions. You Will Learn To define the types of facial and dental trauma and to understand the state-of-art methodology for their repair How to plan for adjunctive procedures in the care of the complex facial and dental trauma patients To integrate virtual surgical and occlusion planning for comprehensive total oral rehabilitation after maxillofacial trauma To determine the specialists to refer to in the complete restoration of both form and function in facial and dental trauma patients Day 2: Saturday: June 25, 2022 Navigating Narcotics Andrew Young, DDS, MSD Of all the tools dentists have for relieving pain, opioids are perhaps the most problematic. This lecture will help you navigate through various challenges to arrive safely at adequate pain control—a route that is different for every patient. Preoperative, perioperative and postoperative approaches for effective pain management will be discussed. Dr. Young will explain how narcotics work and how they compare to each other and to other forms of pain control, along with dosing, how dependence and addiction occur and how that differs by age and by psychological make-up. He will cover the controlled-substances prescribing laws and how to recognize and address addiction and drug-seeking behavior. You Will Learn To identify the neurological and psychological mechanisms of pain How to treat those mechanisms with narcotics and non-narcotics When to prescribe narcotics and how to manage the regimen To assess the medical and legal risks of narcotics Acid Attack: How to Diagnose and Manage Erosive Tooth Wear Rebecca Moazzez, BDS, MSc, PhD This lecture will focus on erosive tooth wear (ETW), its prevalence and why it is important to diagnose and treat. Dr. Moazzez will discuss the etiology, source of acids, methods of detection and diagnosis of the condition. During the interactive presentation, she will examine the risk factors and introduce the basic ETW index. Participants will learn how to use the index in their practices. There will be discussion about various medical conditions associated with ETW and the role of saliva and pellicle. Lastly, the presentation will include the concept of minimally invasive management of ETW. You Will Learn To recognize the etiology of erosive tooth wear (ETW) To detect and diagnose ETW and to utilize the basic ETW index To analyze the role of saliva and pellicle in ETW How to integrate minimally invasive management of ETW into patient care Who Should Attend This course is designed for dentists, specialists and all members of the dental team. Tuition: $495 Dentists; $295 Allied Dental ProfessionalsProgram: 8:30 am – 4:30 pmCheck-in & Breakfast: 7:30 amLocation: Monterey Conference Center, 1 Portola Plaza, Monterey, CA 93940Credits: This activity is designated for 14 units of continuing education credits. *Symposium includes continental breakfast and lunch each day. Travel Information: STAY AT MARRIOTT MONTEREY Enjoy Monterey by staying at the Marriott Monterey next to the Monterey Conference Center. There is a limited room block with our group rate starting at $239 for single or double rooms. To take advantage of this special rate, visit https://book.passkey.com/go/UniversityofthePacific2022 to make an online reservation or call (877) 901-6632 and mention “University of the Pacific.” Hotel reservation deadline is June 1, 2022.All rooms are based on availability and may sell out prior to the deadline. Speakers Stanley Liu, MD, DDS, is an associate professor of otolaryngology and plastic and reconstructive surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine. He is director of the Stanford Sleep Surgery Fellowship, preceptor to the Stanford Oculoplastic Surgery Fellowship and a Stanford Biodesign Faculty Fellow alumnus. Dr. Liu practices the full scope of sleep apnea surgery and introduced adult maxillary expansion (DOME) for OSA with Professor Christian Guilleminault in 2015. He has given keynote talks nationally and internationally across specialties and has published more than 100 scientific articles and medical texts. Gary Roberts, DDS, has performed hospital dentistry and surgery at Stanford University Medical Center and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital since 1995. He is also an oral and maxillofacial surgery faculty member at the Dugoni School of Dentistry. He treats a variety of oral and maxillofacial conditions well as orofacial pain. During his extensive military service, he was one of the leading researchers on combat trauma and the pathophysiology of projectile wounds. He currently serves as a member of the CDA’s Council on Peer Review and is an anesthesia evaluator for the Dental Board of California. He speaks on a variety of topics to organizations both in the U.S. and abroad. Andrew Young, DDS, MSD, received his DDS from UCSF, his GPR certificate from the VA and his MSD in orofacial pain from Rutgers School of Dental Medicine. He is a diplomate of the American Board of Orofacial Pain and a fellow of the American Academy of Orofacial Pain. He is the director of orofacial pain at the Dugoni School of Dentistry and has published 31 peer-reviewed articles. He also heads the Dugoni School’s evidence-based decision-making and critical thinking curriculum, which teaches appraisal of the scientific literature. Rebecca Moazzez, BDS, MSc, PhD, earned a BDS, master’s and PhD from University of London. She is a prosthodontist and one of 16 international experts in the field of erosive tooth wear. She joined the Dugoni School of Dentistry as chair of the Department of Preventive and Restorative Dentistry in 2021. Previously, she was professor of prosthodontics and oral clinical research at King’s College London where she began teaching in 1998. In 2013, she became the college’s founding director of the Oral Clinical Research Unit. Dr. Moazzez has more than 50 publications and grants totaling $4 million to help fund her research. Arthur A Dugoni School of Dentistry Arthur A Dugoni School of Dentistry America/Los_Angeles public

Friday and Saturday, June 24 – 25, 2022

Monterey Conference Center, Monterey, CA

  • Stanley Liu, MD, DDS
    Rebecca Moazzez, BDS, MSc, PhD
  • Gary K. Roberts, DDS
  • Andrew Young, DDS, MSD

Day 1: Friday, June 24, 2022

Form and Function: Comprehensive Care of the Facial and Dental Trauma Patient
Stanley Liu, MD, DDS; Gary K. Roberts, DDS

Traumatic facial injury is perhaps the best example of the need to restore both form and function for patients. Bite, breathing and beauty can all be severely deranged, and an ill-planned repair exacerbates the loss or limitation to function. Virtual surgical planning, 3D printing with additive manufacturing and various systems have made it possible for us to gain minimally invasive access today. Sound fundamental knowledge of the facial bone and muscles remains critical. To achieve goals that our patients deserve, it takes practitioners with a diverse spectrum of expertise working together for a well-coordinated recovery effort. Restoration of function from the reconstruction of form remains at the essence of facial and dental interventions.

You Will Learn

  • To define the types of facial and dental trauma and to understand the state-of-art methodology for their repair
  • How to plan for adjunctive procedures in the care of the complex facial and dental trauma patients
  • To integrate virtual surgical and occlusion planning for comprehensive total oral rehabilitation after maxillofacial trauma
  • To determine the specialists to refer to in the complete restoration of both form and function in facial and dental trauma patients

Day 2: Saturday: June 25, 2022

Navigating Narcotics

Andrew Young, DDS, MSD

Of all the tools dentists have for relieving pain, opioids are perhaps the most problematic. This lecture will help you navigate through various challenges to arrive safely at adequate pain control—a route that is different for every patient. Preoperative, perioperative and postoperative approaches for effective pain management will be discussed. Dr. Young will explain how narcotics work and how they compare to each other and to other forms of pain control, along with dosing, how dependence and addiction occur and how that differs by age and by psychological make-up. He will cover the controlled-substances prescribing laws and how to recognize and address addiction and drug-seeking behavior.

You Will Learn

  • To identify the neurological and psychological mechanisms of pain
  • How to treat those mechanisms with narcotics and non-narcotics
  • When to prescribe narcotics and how to manage the regimen
  • To assess the medical and legal risks of narcotics

Acid Attack: How to Diagnose and Manage Erosive Tooth Wear
Rebecca Moazzez, BDS, MSc, PhD

This lecture will focus on erosive tooth wear (ETW), its prevalence and why it is important to diagnose and treat. Dr. Moazzez will discuss the etiology, source of acids, methods of detection and diagnosis of the condition. During the interactive presentation, she will examine the risk factors and introduce the basic ETW index. Participants will learn how to use the index in their practices. There will be discussion about various medical conditions associated with ETW and the role of saliva and pellicle. Lastly, the presentation will include the concept of minimally invasive management of ETW.

You Will Learn

  • To recognize the etiology of erosive tooth wear (ETW)
  • To detect and diagnose ETW and to utilize the basic ETW index
  • To analyze the role of saliva and pellicle in ETW
  • How to integrate minimally invasive management of ETW into patient care

Who Should Attend

This course is designed for dentists, specialists and all members of the dental team.

Tuition: $495 Dentists; $295 Allied Dental Professionals
Program: 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Check-in & Breakfast: 7:30 am
Location: Monterey Conference Center, 1 Portola Plaza, Monterey, CA 93940
Credits: This activity is designated for 14 units of continuing education credits.

*Symposium includes continental breakfast and lunch each day.

Travel Information:

STAY AT MARRIOTT MONTEREY

Enjoy Monterey by staying at the Marriott Monterey next to the Monterey Conference Center. There is a limited room block with our group rate starting at $239 for single or double rooms. To take advantage of this special rate, visit https://book.passkey.com/go/UniversityofthePacific2022 to make an online reservation or call (877) 901-6632 and mention “University of the Pacific.”

Hotel reservation deadline is June 1, 2022.
All rooms are based on availability and may sell out prior to the deadline.

Speakers

Stanley Liu, MD, DDS, is an associate professor of otolaryngology and plastic and reconstructive surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine. He is director of the Stanford Sleep Surgery Fellowship, preceptor to the Stanford Oculoplastic Surgery Fellowship and a Stanford Biodesign Faculty Fellow alumnus. Dr. Liu practices the full scope of sleep apnea surgery and introduced adult maxillary expansion (DOME) for OSA with Professor Christian Guilleminault in 2015. He has given keynote talks nationally and internationally across specialties and has published more than 100 scientific articles and medical texts.

Gary Roberts, DDS, has performed hospital dentistry and surgery at Stanford University Medical Center and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital since 1995. He is also an oral and maxillofacial surgery faculty member at the Dugoni School of Dentistry. He treats a variety of oral and maxillofacial conditions well as orofacial pain. During his extensive military service, he was one of the leading researchers on combat trauma and the pathophysiology of projectile wounds. He currently serves as a member of the CDA’s Council on Peer Review and is an anesthesia evaluator for the Dental Board of California. He speaks on a variety of topics to organizations both in the U.S. and abroad.

Andrew Young, DDS, MSD, received his DDS from UCSF, his GPR certificate from the VA and his MSD in orofacial pain from Rutgers School of Dental Medicine. He is a diplomate of the American Board of Orofacial Pain and a fellow of the American Academy of Orofacial Pain. He is the director of orofacial pain at the Dugoni School of Dentistry and has published 31 peer-reviewed articles. He also heads the Dugoni School’s evidence-based decision-making and critical thinking curriculum, which teaches appraisal of the scientific literature.

Rebecca Moazzez, BDS, MSc, PhD, earned a BDS, master’s and PhD from University of London. She is a prosthodontist and one of 16 international experts in the field of erosive tooth wear. She joined the Dugoni School of Dentistry as chair of the Department of Preventive and Restorative Dentistry in 2021. Previously, she was professor of prosthodontics and oral clinical research at King’s College London where she began teaching in 1998. In 2013, she became the college’s founding director of the Oral Clinical Research Unit. Dr. Moazzez has more than 50 publications and grants totaling $4 million to help fund her research.

Monterey