GRAND RAPIDS, MI, July 02, 2011 (Press-News.org) Recognized as an expert in the field of cosmetics and technology in dentistry, Dr. Lambert, Grand Rapids dentist, is pleased to offer patients ongoing valuable insight to dentistry with his practice newsletter, Smile Update. These updates were created to offer patients a way to remain up-to-date with not only the office, but current dental health issues as well, and can be accessed via the practice's website.
The Smile Update, by Dr. Thomas Lambert, was created to improve patient's' dental health and awareness. Patients can visit the practice's website to access this publication for valuable information. In a recent update, patients can find information on Lori Totten's recent recognition as one of the top five hygienists in America, as well as valuable dental health care information.
"It is important that my patients receive the most up-to-date dental information, as well as about the office. This is why we have created the Smile Update via our website. Patients can access our website to view this material, as well as gain access to other valuable informational tools. Education should continue well into the day, and not just at the office," said Dr. Thomas Lambert, dentist in Grand Rapids.
Patients can visit the practice's educational library for an array of informational pages. Topics included in the library include teeth whitening, dental implants and veneers in Grand Rapids, among a variety of other topics. No matter their question, patients can turn to the educational library or the smile update for all of their answers.
In addition to the new patient education content, the practice's website offers a full array of practice information. From easy online appointment requesting to downloadable new patient forms, all the information that patients need to make informed decisions about their dental health is readily available from Dr. Lambert's website.
When patients are looking for quality dental health care, they turn to Dr. Thomas Lambert, Grand Rapids family dentist, for services that they can trust. The practice's commitment to improving the patient experience with new technology is further conveyed with the introduction of the practice's informative smile updates which can be accessed via the website's home page.
About Dr. Thomas Lambert, DDS: Dr. Lambert is a member of the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry, and has had extensive training in some of the most advanced aesthetic techniques available today. He is a distinguished lecturer and author, and has written numerous articles for dental journals on cosmetic dentistry. Offering procedures in Grand Rapids veneers, whitening and implants, Dr. Lambert firmly believes that his patients deserve gentle, state-of-the-art care from professionals who really care.
Media Contact:
Dr. Thomas Lambert
contactus@lambertdds.com
3300 Grand Ridge Drive
Grand Rapids, MI 49525
(616) 364-6490
http://www.lambertdds.com
Grand Rapids Dentist Keeps Patients In The Know With Smile Update
Dr. Thomas Lambert, dentist in Grand Rapids, maintains communication with patients through informational dental newsletter, Smile Update.
2011-07-02
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Mutations can spur dangerous identity crisis in cells
2011-07-02
As our bodies first form, developing cells are a lot like children put on the school bus with their names and addresses pinned to their shirts.
The notes identify one as a future heart cell, another as a liver cell, a third as a neuron. And that's what they each grow up to be.
But once those cells reach adulthood, changes to those original marching orders caused by aging, disease and other stressors like smoking can precipitate a kind of identity crisis, researchers at the University of Michigan Health System have found.
The cells start to forget things like which ...
Treatment approach to human Usher syndrome: Small molecules ignore stop signals
2011-07-02
Usher syndrome is the most common form of combined congenital deaf-blindness in humans and affects 1 in 6,000 of the population. It is a recessive inherited disease that is both clinically and genetically heterogeneous. In the most severe cases, patients are born deaf and begin to suffer from a degeneration of the retina in puberty, ultimately resulting in complete blindness. These patients experience major problems in their day-to-day life. While hearing loss can be compensated for with hearing aids and cochlea implants, it has not proven possible to develop a treatment ...
Global plant database set to promote biodiversity research and Earth-system sciences
2011-07-02
The world's largest database on plants' functional properties, or traits, has been pub-lished. Scientists compiled three million traits for 69,000 out of the world's ~300,000 plant species. The achievement rests on a worldwide collaboration of scientists from 106 re-search institutions. The initiative, known as TRY, is hosted at the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry in Jena (Germany). Jointly coordinated with the University of Leipzig (Germany), IMBIV-CONICET (Argentina), Macquarie University (Australia), CNRS and University of Paris-Sud (France), TRY promises to ...
Evolution of sport performances follows a physiological law
2011-07-02
Geoffroy Berthelot and Stephane Len, both researchers at the IRMES (Institut de Recherche bioMédicale et d'Epidemiologie du Sport at INSEP, Paris, France), have published their findings in Age, the official journal of the American Aging Association, describing the evolution of performances in elite athletes and chess grandmasters. This article is congruous with the epidemiological approaches developed by the laboratory, and suggests that changes in individual performance are linked to physiological laws structuring the living world.
Physiological parameters that characterize ...
New study documents first cookiecutter shark attack on a live human
2011-07-02
GAINESVILLE, Fla. --- A new study co-authored by University of Florida researchers provides details on the first cookiecutter shark attack on a live human, a concern as warm summer waters attract more people to the ocean.
The study currently online and appearing in the July print edition of Pacific Science warns that swimmers entering the cookiecutter's range of open ocean tropical waters may be considered prey.
The sharks feed near the surface at night, meaning daytime swimmers are less likely to encounter them. The species is small, with adults reaching about 2 feet, ...
Self-referral: A significant factor in imaging growth
2011-07-02
A recent study in the Journal of the American College of Radiology suggests that self-referral in medical imaging may be a significant contributing factor in diagnostic imaging growth.
Self-referred imaging is identified as physicians (or non-physicians) who are not radiologists directing their patients to their own on-site imaging services or the referral of patients to outside facilities in which the referring physicians have financial interest.
In the current political and economic climate, there is a desire to reduce health care costs; diagnostic imaging expenditure ...
Big hole filled in cloud research
2011-07-02
Under certain conditions, private and commercial propeller planes and jet aircraft may induce odd-shaped holes or canals into clouds as they fly through them. These holes and canals have long fascinated the public and now new research shows they may affect precipitation in and around airports with frequent cloud cover in the wintertime.
Here is how: Planes may produce ice particles by freezing cloud droplets that cool as they flow around the tips of propellers, over wings or over jet aircraft, and thereby unintentionally seed clouds. These seeding ice particles attract ...
E. coli can survive in streambed sediments for months
2011-07-02
Studies by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists have confirmed that the presence of Escherichia coli pathogens in surface waters could result from the pathogen's ability to survive for months in underwater sediments. Most E. coli strains don't cause illness, but they are indicator organisms used by water quality managers to estimate fecal contamination.
These findings, which can help pinpoint potential sources of water contamination, support the USDA priorities of promoting sustainable agriculture and food safety.
Soil scientist Yakov Pachepsky works ...
Copper reduces infection risk by more than 40 percent
2011-07-02
Professor Bill Keevil, Head of the Microbiology Group and Director of the Environmental Healthcare Unit at the University of Southampton, has presented research into the mechanism by which copper exerts its antimicrobial effect on antibiotic-resistant organisms at the World Health Organization's first International Conference on Prevention and Infection Control (ICPIC).
'New Insights into the Antimicrobial Mechanisms of Copper Touch Surfaces' observes the survival of pathogens on conventional hospital touch surfaces contributes to increasing incidence and spread of antibiotic ...
Environs prompt advantageous gene mutations as plants grow; changes passed to progeny
2011-07-02
If a person were to climb a towering redwood and take a sample from the top and bottom of the tree, a comparison would show that the DNA are different.
Christopher A. Cullis, chair of biology at Case Western Reserve University, explains that this is the basis of his controversial research findings.
Cullis, who has spent over 40 years studying mutations within plants, most recently flax (Linum usitatissimum), has found that the environment not only weeds out harmful and useless mutations through natural selection, but actually influences helpful mutations.
Cullis published ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The Drug Target Discovery Institute of Korea University successfully held opening symposium
UNM astronomers confirm new gas giant exoplanet with help from citizen scientists worldwide
Electrochemical catheter hub could prevent bloodstream infections
Spotting bad batteries before they malfunction
Grip strength gives researchers a new handle on psychosis
Metals found in disposable e-cigarette vapor could pose health risks
Disposable e-cigarettes more toxic than traditional cigarettes
Technical refinement in airway surgery: Wrapping tracheobronchial anastomoses
Understanding how a key protein helps aggressive blood cancer grow, paving the way for targeted therapies
Uncovering the role of vitamin C in skin regeneration
Advancing regenerative agriculture: TUdi unveils new digital tools for soil health monitoring
More staff addressing mental health in schools buffers toll of growing up in disadvantaged communities
Still top cause of death, the types of heart disease people are dying from is changing
Scientists detect deep Earth pulses beneath Africa
As fewer Americans die from heart attacks, more succumb to chronic heart disease
Guidance issued for GPs managing weight-loss injection patients
Low-cost carbon capture? Bury wood debris in managed forests
Scientists unravel mystery of Mycetoma grain formation
Exposure to particulate matter during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of childhood obesity
How a propolis compound with health benefits interacts with cell membranes: Study reveals nymphaeol a in action
Flawed impact metrics jeopardize EU deregulation plans, study finds
New study calls for rethink on alcohol policy
New Danish research centre to make designed proteins with vast potential
Thin-film research enters new era with innovative AI approach
Smart amplifier enabler for more qubits in future quantum computers
Following the tracks of an extremely adaptive bacterium
New ‘designer drugs’ pose growing threat to road safety in the US
Tackling depressive symptoms in high school students by honing emotional and social skills
One in five US foods and drinks contain synthetic dyes, study shows
One in five packaged foods and drinks sold in the United States contains synthetic dyes, study shows
[Press-News.org] Grand Rapids Dentist Keeps Patients In The Know With Smile UpdateDr. Thomas Lambert, dentist in Grand Rapids, maintains communication with patients through informational dental newsletter, Smile Update.