You mark every tooth, every bridge, and every implant on the chart. The lab receives your plan inside the prescription — the exact document you approved, with no reinterpretation along the way.
Seven colors. Seven roles. The lab sees at a glance what each tooth does in the plan — no tables, no abbreviations, no interpretation.
No text lists. No ambiguous numbers. The chart shows the full arch with color-coded classifications — the lab knows exactly what role each tooth plays.
Not just a number in a table. A piece on a map where color defines the role: blue for abutments, amber for pontics, red for extractions, purple for implants.
The tech sees the whole case in two seconds. No instructions to read. No abbreviations to interpret.
When you turn "Bridge ON", abutment and pontic teeth get visually linked by amber arcs that represent the bridge structure. The lab sees the span, the supports, and the sections at a glance.
No more descriptions like "bridge from 3 to 6 with pontics at 4 and 5". The map shows it. Automatic validation of span length and abutment distribution.
One click opens the classification panel. 7 color-coded types, an implant brand picker with the 10 most-used brands, and a per-tooth clinical notes field.
The lab receives a structured data point — not a handwritten instruction someone has to interpret.
When a tooth is classified as an implant, the chart draws the full post below or above the tooth — helical thread and apex. Not a generic icon, but the real silhouette of the component.
The classification panel records brand, platform, diameter, and length. The lab receives the exact component — not "Straumann standard", but Straumann BLT NC 3.3 × 10mm.
A toggle switches the arch to pediatric mode: 10 teeth per arch, automatic FDI notation (55-65 upper, 85-75 lower). The system adjusts the interface — not the tech.
For mixed-dentition cases or pediatric clinics that need digital prescriptions with the same precision as adult cases.
The dental chart lives inside the Digital Prescription, alongside material, shade, special instructions, and version history. Everything in one document that reaches the lab.
No more "tooth 14... or was it 24?" The dental chart attacks the three most common ambiguities in clinic-to-lab communication.
The visual map removes the dependence on numbers. FDI or Universal, the tooth is identified by position in the arch. Impossible to mistake 14 for 24.
Every tooth has an explicit classification — abutment, pontic, extraction. No room for "I think that one was the abutment". The color says it.
Bridge mode validates the distribution: abutments at the ends, pontics in the middle, connector arcs visible. Structural errors surface before fabrication starts.
The interactive dental chart is part of TrazaLab — the platform where every case arrives complete, moves without friction, and ships without surprises.