A theory-based and practical course on the diagnosis and minimally invasive treatment of white spots and developmental enamel defects.
For clinicians who want to understand when to choose resin infiltration, when to use whitening, when microabrasion is indicated — and how to combine these approaches safely in everyday practice. The goal is not one universal protocol, but understanding why different enamel defects require different clinical decisions.
White spot lesions, fluorosis, MIH, post-traumatic changes and developmental enamel defects may look similar — yet their origin, depth and behaviour differ. The correct diagnosis decides whether the best approach is monitoring, remineralization, whitening, microabrasion, resin infiltration, deep infiltration, or a combination.
Diagnosis of enamel changes. Distinguishing post-orthodontic WSLs, fluorosis, MIH, developmental defects and post-traumatic changes.
Decision-making protocol. When to monitor, whiten, choose microabrasion, indicate infiltration — and when to combine. Always the least invasive option that makes biological, esthetic and clinical sense.
Whitening. Standalone and as preparation before infiltration; when it improves the result, when it changes the contrast of the defect, and how to place it in the plan.
Microabrasion. A conservative technique for superficial changes; indications, limits, and combination with whitening or infiltration.
Resin infiltration. Principles, indications, limits and workflow: etching, the ethanol test, lesion-depth evaluation, infiltrant application, light curing, finishing and polishing.
Deep infiltration. Modifying the protocol for deeper lesions, MIH and pronounced opacities; evaluating progress and deciding during the procedure.
Combined protocols. Bleaching + infiltration; microabrasion + infiltration; deep infiltration + minimal composite correction; whitening before composite bonding; finishing and polishing after infiltration.
Dentists who want to feel more confident diagnosing and treating white spots, developmental enamel defects and esthetic enamel changes in the anterior region — post-orthodontic WSLs, fluorosis, MIH, developmental defects, post-traumatic changes, esthetic corrections without preparation, and minimally invasive esthetic planning.
Theory, clinical cases, decision-making algorithms and hands-on training on models or extracted teeth. Not just a demonstration of a technique — understanding enamel, light, lesion depth, and how to intervene as little as possible, but enough.
Restorative dentist and educator focused on esthetic and minimally invasive dentistry – composite restorations, anterior esthetics, and treatment of enamel defects. She works under the operating microscope and teaches a biomimetic, tissue-respecting approach.
Read the full profile →23 Nov 2026 · Brno, Czechner factory park. Places are limited.