Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Herbert Schilder

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Name
  
Herbert Schilder

Role
  
Dental surgeon

Education
  
New York University


Herbert Schilder httpsiytimgcomvinB5igh8AiSohqdefaultjpg


Died
  
January 25, 2006, Newton, Massachusetts, United States

Rl514 no 43 herbert schilder


Herbert Schilder (born in Brooklyn, New York, death in Newton, Massachusetts, 25 January 2006) was a dental surgeon. Schilder is best known for the improvements he made to root canal therapies (endodontic therapy) in the 1960s, when he taught at the Boston University School of Dental Medicine.

Herbert Schilder received his D.D.S. from New York University, and taught at Tufts University and Temple University prior to permanently joining Boston University in 1958. In his early years after joining Boston University, he founded the specialty program in endodontics to train dentists to become endodontists. He also developed a new technique to fill root canals after disinfection, now known as "Schilder's warm gutta-percha vertical compaction technique." This technique is now widely used by most endodontic programs.

He was president of the American Association of Endodontists and of the Massachusetts Dental Society. He was also the first vice president of the American Dental Association.

Dr. Schilder was a very influential scholar and educator in endodontics. His level of popularity in the field led to the use of his name in the movie Finding Nemo, in which the "Schilder technique" was mentioned in the conversation between the fish.

References

Herbert Schilder Wikipedia