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What is the workflow for G-CAM Graphenano, and what records does ROE need?

G-CAM follows ROE's prototype-driven full-arch sequence: you submit records, ROE returns a prototype for you to verify, and then the final prosthesis is produced. According to ROE's restorative guide, the process is:

Stage What happens
1. Submit records Send a RAPID Appliance or use a digital protocol to transfer implant positions, tooth position, the bite, tissue, and opposing.
2. Prototype try-in Evaluate the prototype for esthetics, occlusion, phonetics, and tissue contours, and confirm patient acceptance before finalizing.
3. Final ROE produces the final milled prosthesis bonded to the fiber-composite or titanium substructure.

Records to capture: as with any full-arch final, include an accurate bite, the opposing (impression, model, or registration), and photographs so the lab can match esthetics and occlusion. The RAPID Appliance is an exact duplicate of the patient's day-of-surgery provisional and is a clean way to transfer the approved setup. The prototype (often a Printed Try-In) is where esthetics, occlusion, and fit should be confirmed and corrected, not at final delivery.

Plan for space: confirm the case has the 15 mm of vertical space the design calls for before committing. For the complete full-arch records and finishing protocol, download the Ultimate Restorative Protocol Guide eBook, and use ROE's Chairside Support if you want help during a step. You can plan the patient's return with the Case Delivery Calculator.

 

Resources

    Contact Information

    For immediate chairside support or troubleshooting assistance, contact ROE Dental Laboratory: