Same-day dentistry is no longer a futuristic concept. Around the world, more clinics are rethinking how restorative workflows are structured — not only to improve efficiency, but to reduce patient return visits and increase treatment acceptance.
For many practices, the question is no longer whether to adopt chairside CAD/CAM, but how to make it work predictably in daily clinical routines.

Why Reducing Return Visits Matters
Modern patients value convenience as much as clinical excellence. A restoration that traditionally required:
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Impression
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Temporary crown
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Laboratory fabrication
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Second appointment
can now, in many cases, be completed within a single visit.
Reducing return visits means:
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Higher patient satisfaction
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Lower risk of temporary-related complications
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Improved case acceptance
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More efficient chairtime utilization
For clinics operating in competitive urban environments, this shift directly impacts profitability and reputation.
The Evolution of Chairside CAD/CAM
Early chairside systems focused primarily on speed. Today, the focus has shifted toward workflow integration and predictability.
A modern chairside setup typically includes:
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High-accuracy intraoral scanning
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Integrated CAD design software
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In-house milling
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Fast crystallization or finishing
The key challenge is no longer technology availability — it is workflow coherence.
When scanning, design, nesting, and milling are fragmented across separate systems, efficiency gains are quickly lost.
What Makes a Chairside Workflow Predictable?
Clinics that successfully implement same-day restorations often share three characteristics:
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A guided, intuitive design process
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Stable wet milling for ceramics and composite materials
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Clear case selection criteria
Predictability is especially important for:
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Single crowns
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Inlays and onlays
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Anterior esthetic cases
Composite resin restorations can often be completed within 40 minutes under optimized workflows, while glass ceramic cases may take approximately 1.5 hours including crystallization.
The difference lies not just in speed, but in control.
Integrating Chairside Without Disrupting Daily Practice
One concern among clinicians is whether chairside CAD/CAM adds complexity.
In reality, modern systems are increasingly designed to reduce friction:
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Compressor-free wet milling units reduce installation barriers
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Built-in CAD/CAM software minimizes data transfer steps
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Guided workflows simplify onboarding for clinical teams
Instead of adding another layer of technology, the goal is to create a seamless restorative path — from scan to final restoration — within one connected ecosystem.
The Future of Same-Day Restorations
As digital dentistry continues to mature, chairside workflows are becoming less about novelty and more about operational strategy.
Practices that adopt integrated solutions are not only improving clinical efficiency but reshaping patient expectations.
The future of restorative dentistry is not defined by speed alone — it is defined by simplicity, control, and integration.
For clinics exploring how to implement a streamlined, fully digital chairside workflow, solutions like Soreal demonstrate how scanning, design, and wet milling can work together as one unified system.










