Everything you need to stand confidently at the chair — the materials, the suction, the protocols, and the ACE standard behind every smile we build.
You're joining the most recognised smile-makeover studio on the coast. Here's what that means, and how to use this book.
Welcome to ACE DNTL STUDIO. You're about to become part of something patients fly across continents for — and your hands at the chair are a real part of why the result is what it is.
This handbook is yours. Read it once from front to back in your first week, then keep it as the thing you reach for when you're not sure. It won't replace standing next to an experienced colleague — nothing does — but it will mean you're rarely starting from zero.
ACE DNTL STUDIO is an internationally recognised aesthetic dental studio, founded by Dr. Ace Korkchi. We have three studios on the Costa del Sol — Marbella, Estepona (your studio), and Riviera del Sol — and our own boutique ceramics laboratory dedicated entirely to our cases.
We are best known for smile makeovers and porcelain veneers. That's our specialty. But it's important you understand from day one:
We specialise in aesthetics — but we are a full-service adult dental practice.
We offer the complete spectrum of adult dentistry: veneers, smile makeovers, whitening, crowns & bridges, implants, Invisalign, root canals, gum treatment, extractions, fillings, hygiene, night guards, and adult dental emergencies. The only thing we don't do is children's dentistry (we refer those to a trusted specialist), and we only place porcelain veneers, never composite ones — by choice, not by limitation.
So if a patient ever asks "do you do extractions?" or "can you see me, I'm in pain?" — the answer is yes, warmly. Never tell a patient we're "cosmetic only." We're not.
We are internationally renowned and first on every AI search in Europe for smile makeovers. We speak with quiet confidence — never with hype, never with bragging, and never with words like small, little, family practice, or quiet. Confident and transparent. That's the register.
Most of what you'll assist is aesthetic and elective — patients choosing to change their smile, often after years of thinking about it. That changes the room. There's no emergency rush to most of our work; there's care, precision, and time. A few things define how we work, and they'll come up again and again in this book:
Each part builds on the last. Throughout, watch for these boxes:
The way we do it here. When in doubt, this wins.
Your specific responsibility in that moment.
The reason behind a rule — so you remember it.
A line we don't cross. Learn these cold.
A clinic-specific detail to fill in with your Estepona lead in week one.
The full, formal versions of our protocols live in BACKSTAGE (our internal system). This handbook teaches you your part in them. Where a formal protocol exists, it's named so you can find it.
The three studios, the lab that sets us apart, the team around you, and the shape of your day.
We work across three locations on the coast — Marbella (Puerto Banús / Nueva Andalucía), Estepona, and Riviera del Sol (Mijas Costa). You're based in Estepona, but you're part of one studio with one standard. A patient should feel the same ACE wherever they sit.
Here's something to understand and be able to explain, because patients ask. We own our own laboratory: ACE DNTL LAB. It's a central, boutique laboratory dedicated to ACE cases, sitting between our three clinics. A digital designer works in the room in every studio, alongside the dentist and the patient. Master ceramists then build the work at the lab.
"We own our lab — our own boutique, dedicated to our cases. Designed in the room with you, built at our laboratory." And on materials: "Most clinics stop at e-max. That's where we start." (More on that in Part 6.)
You'll work alongside several roles. Knowing who does what helps you anticipate and helps the patient feel held.
| Role | What they do | Your relationship to them |
|---|---|---|
| Dentist | Diagnoses, plans, preps, cements. Founded by Dr. Ace Korkchi; you'll assist whichever dentist is on chair. | You are their second pair of hands. Anticipate, don't wait to be asked. |
| Nurse / Assistant (you) | Sets up, sterilises, suctions, passes instruments, mixes materials, supports the patient, documents. | The constant in the room. You make everything flow. |
| Digital designer | Designs the smile on screen (Digital Smile Design) in the room with the patient. | You'll help capture the photos and scans they design from. |
| Hygienist | Professional cleaning, scaling, airflow, gum health. | You may set up and turn around their room too. |
| Reception / coordinator | First contact, bookings, the patient's calm welcome, the mirror at the reveal. | They hand the patient over to you ready, and you hand them back cared-for. |
| Ceramists (the lab) | Build the veneers and crowns by hand. Only work on ACE cases. | They depend on the briefs, shades and photos you help capture being perfect. |
Write in the people you'll work with most in Estepona:
Lead dentist(s): Senior nurse / who to ask: Reception / coordinator: Practice / operations manager:
Our days have a rhythm. It's set out formally in the Sterilisation & Treatment-Room Setup protocol; here's the human version. (Full detail in Part 2.)
Studio hours (group standard is Mon–Fri, 9:00–18:00): Your start time & locker / scrubs arrangement: BACKSTAGE login & the practice software (PMS) you'll use: Where the lab courier collects / delivers, and the cut-off times:
ACE is a non-traditional dentist, and a patient feels it the moment they walk in. What they hear, smell, see and feel is not decoration — it is the first treatment. For someone who has dreaded this visit for weeks, the atmosphere is where the calm begins, before a single word is spoken. And every morning, before any patient arrives, you set that stage.
If it feels like a dentist, we have failed.
It should feel like a boutique hotel — somewhere a patient would choose to be. The drill, the clinical glare, the smell of a surgery: those stay out of sight and out of mind. What reaches the patient is warm light, soft music, a beautiful scent, and quiet.
A nervous patient's body decides how the appointment will go before they ever reach the chair. Warmth, scent and sound settle the nervous system; a cold, bright, silent, chemical-smelling room does the opposite. Staging the studio well is one of the kindest clinical things we do — and it costs nothing but care.
The playlist goes on before the doors open and stays on until the end-of-day reset. Set the volume so it is present but easy to talk over — low, calm, never silent and never loud. Silence is the enemy: in a quiet room, every sound of dentistry grows louder in the patient's mind. The music gives them something else to hold on to.
The signature scent is refreshed first thing — diffuser on, rooms aired. No clinical smell ever reaches the patient. That note of disinfectant or eugenol that instantly says "dentist" is exactly what we design out. The studio should smell like a hotel lobby, not a surgery. (At the end of each day we set the scent for the next morning, so it is already there when the doors open.)
Soft and layered. Blinds to gentle daylight, lamps on; the harsh overhead clinical light belongs only in the treatment field, switched on when the dentist needs it and off in between. Where patients wait and walk, the light should flatter, never glare.
The studio is kept comfortable — warm, around 21–22°C — with a blanket or cushion offered before it is asked for, and water, tea or coffee ready. Cold and bare reads as "clinic." Warm and considered reads as "studio."
Nothing clinical is on show in the patient's world: no loose instruments, no trays, no clutter. Glass and mirrors are clean, flowers are fresh, surfaces are clear. And we greet a patient the way a good hotel greets a guest — by name, their file ready, their preferences remembered: their drink, their music, the thing that makes them nervous. They are received, not processed. (The human side of this is Part 8.)
Run this every morning alongside the clinical morning-open in Part 2. The clinical open makes the studio safe; this makes it feel like ACE.
You are the stage manager of the morning. By the time the first patient walks in, the studio should already feel calm, warm and beautiful — as though it had always been that way. No one should ever catch you setting the scene; they should only feel that it is set.
The playlist, where the music plays from, and the target volume: The signature scent product, and where the diffusers live: Lighting and thermostat — what "set" looks like, and the controls: The drinks offering, and who keeps it stocked: Who owns the morning staging on each shift:
If you master one thing first, make it this. Everything else in the room rests on it.
A beautiful veneer means nothing if the instrument that placed it wasn't clean. Infection control is the part of the job no patient sees — and the part you can never, ever cut a corner on. This is where you start.
Two simple ideas sit under every rule in this part:
Your hands are the number-one route of cross-infection, and the number-one defence. Wash or sanitise at five moments: before touching a patient, before a clean/aseptic task, after any risk of body-fluid exposure, after touching a patient, and after touching the patient's surroundings.
| Item | When | The rule |
|---|---|---|
| Gloves | Every patient contact | New pair per patient. Never wash and re-use. Change if torn. Remove before touching pens, phones, drawers, door handles. |
| Mask | Any aerosol-generating work (drilling, scaling, air/water) | Fresh per session / when damp. Covers nose and mouth, moulded to the nose. |
| Eye protection | You and the patient | Safety glasses for you; glasses or a shield for the patient — splatter and debris fly further than you'd think. |
| Tunic / scrubs | Clinical sessions | Clean daily, changed if contaminated. Short sleeves so you can wash to the elbow. |
Order on: hand hygiene → mask → eyewear → gloves. Order off (most-to-least dirty): gloves → hand hygiene → eyewear → mask → hand hygiene again. Gloves come off first because they're the dirtiest thing on you.
This is the single most important sequence in this part. Used instruments travel in one direction through these stages. Learn the order.
An autoclave only sterilises what's physically clean. Blood, saliva or cement left on an instrument shields the germs underneath from the steam. That's why cleaning comes first, always — and why we inspect before pouching.
This is the Sterilisation & Treatment-Room Setup protocol, in your hands.
First clinical activity of the day — owned by the duty nurse, logged on the morning sheet.
Tray laid out by procedure before the patient enters. Nothing taken from a drawer in front of them.
A seven-minute reset, surfaces cleaned in the same order every time.
Left ready for the next morning, not the next minute.
Every instrument set is pouched, dated and signed — and the pouch is opened in front of the patient. The patient hears the seal break. They hear it for a reason: it's the sound of proof that everything touching them is sterile. Never open pouches out of sight and lay instruments out "ready." The ritual is part of the care.
Autoclave model & its daily test routine: Which disinfectant for morning / between-patient / end-of-day: Where each waste stream goes & collection schedule: Where the sterilisation logbook lives:
Where you sit, how the room is built, and the instruments you'll learn to recognise without looking.
| Equipment | What it is & your part |
|---|---|
| Dental chair | Positions the patient. You'll learn the supine (lying-back) position for most work, and to raise the patient slowly afterward so they don't feel dizzy. |
| Operating light | Lights the mouth. You adjust it so the dentist sees the field — and so it's never shining in the patient's eyes. |
| Delivery unit | Holds the handpieces and the 3-in-1 syringe. You keep it stocked, clean, and the lines flushed. |
| Suction lines | The high-volume (HVE) and low-volume (saliva ejector) suction. Your main tools — all of Part 4. |
| 3-in-1 / triple syringe | Delivers air, water, or a spray. You'll use it to rinse and dry the field. |
| Curing light | Sets (hardens) light-cured materials — bonding, composite, some cements. Hold it close and steady for the full time; never shine it in anyone's eyes. |
| Handpieces | The "drills." High-speed (fast, water-cooled, for cutting); slow-speed (for polishing, adjusting); plus the ultrasonic scaler and surgical handpieces. |
| X-ray | Imaging. Know the radiation rules — who steps out, where you stand, and the patient's apron. |
| Intraoral scanner | Takes a digital impression of the teeth — central to our Digital Smile Design. Keep the tip sterile and the software ready. |
Picture a clock face around the patient's head (12 is straight above their head). Four-handed dentistry divides it into zones so two people can work over one small space without colliding. For a right-handed dentist:
If you're left-handed or the dentist is, the whole picture mirrors. The principle doesn't change: you sit opposite, you pass below the chin, and the patient never sees the sharp things coming.
You don't need to memorise everything in week one — but you'll quickly learn to set the right tray and hand the right thing. Here are the families.
| Mouth mirror | Reflects light, lets the dentist see indirectly, and retracts the cheek or tongue. |
| Probe / explorer | A fine point to feel for decay, edges and roughness. |
| Periodontal (WHO) probe | Banded ruler-tip to measure gum pockets. |
| College tweezers | Angled tweezers to carry small items — cotton pellets, wedges — to and from the mouth. |
| Flat plastic / composite instruments | Place and shape soft composite or cement before it's set. |
| Excavator | Spoon-shaped, scoops out soft decay. |
| Burnisher | Smooths and adapts margins. |
| Matrix band & wedge | Wraps a tooth to rebuild its wall; the wedge seals the gap at the gum. |
| Articulating paper & holder | Coloured paper that marks where the bite touches, so the dentist adjusts high spots. |
| Elevators / luxators | Loosen a tooth in its socket before removal. |
| Extraction forceps | Grip and deliver the tooth; shaped differently for each tooth type. |
| Periosteal elevator | Lifts the gum to expose bone in surgery. |
| Needle holder, sutures, scissors | To stitch the gum closed. |
| Scalers & curettes | Hand instruments that remove hard deposits (tartar) above and below the gum. |
| Ultrasonic scaler | Vibrates deposits off with water cooling — aerosol-heavy, so mask and suction matter. |
Learn each tray — the standard set for a consultation, a veneer prep, a try-in, a cementation, a hygiene visit, an extraction. Setting the correct tray, complete, before the patient enters, is one of the most valuable things you do. A missing instrument mid-procedure breaks the calm we work so hard to build.
How to hold the suction, where to place it, and why a dry, clear field is the difference between a good result and a re-do.
This is the heart of chairside assisting — and for aesthetic work especially, it's everything. Bonding a veneer needs a field that is bone dry and crystal clear. The dentist's hands are full; keeping that field is your job, and you'll do it thousands of times. Here's how to do it well.
| Suction | What it's for |
|---|---|
| High-Volume Evacuator (HVE — the big one) | Your main tool. Clears water, saliva, blood and debris fast, pulls away the aerosol spray from the drill, and retracts the cheek or tongue. Used actively, in your hand, throughout cutting and rinsing. |
| Saliva ejector (low-volume — the thin one) | Gentle, continuous, low suction. Sits in the floor of the mouth to draw off pooling saliva while the patient rests — during cementation under isolation, or while a material sets. Hooks over the lip; you don't hold it. |
Two grips, depending on where you're reaching:
Which hand? You hold the suction in the hand nearer the patient's head, leaving your other hand free for the 3-in-1 syringe and to pass instruments in the transfer zone over the chin. Rest the tube against your forearm so its weight isn't all in your fingers — you'll be holding it a long time.
Good suction is mostly good placement. Six rules carry almost all of it:
While the HVE clears, your free hand often holds the 3-in-1 (triple) syringe to rinse and dry: water to wash debris, air to dry the tooth for the dentist to inspect, and a spray of both to flush. A common move is the wash-and-dry: spray, then catch all of it instantly with the HVE so nothing pools or sprays the patient. For aesthetic bonding, drying the tooth properly between steps is critical — wet bonding fails.
For the most moisture-sensitive work — above all, cementing veneers — suction alone isn't enough. We isolate the teeth completely. (This connects to the Final Cementation Protocol in Part 7.)
| Rubber dam | A thin sheet stretched over a frame, isolating the teeth through small holes so they stay perfectly dry and clean — saliva, lip and tongue all held back. Used for every veneer cementation, no exceptions. You help place, secure and clear around it. |
| Cotton rolls & dry tips | Absorbent rolls in the cheek and floor of the mouth; dry tips over the salivary gland openings. Simple, fast isolation for shorter procedures. |
| Saliva ejector | Sits under the dam or beside the cotton rolls to draw off whatever still pools. |
Resin cement and bonding agents are chemically allergic to moisture. A single drop of saliva on a prepared tooth at the wrong moment can mean a veneer that de-bonds weeks later — and a patient flying back, disappointed, for a re-do. The dry field is the bond. That's why this is the skill we want you to own first.
A patient should finish a procedure dry-chinned, never having choked, never having been sprayed. If you do suction well, they'll never notice it at all — which is exactly the point.
Two people, one small space, no wasted motion. How to pass, when to pass, and how to stay one step ahead.
"Four-handed" means the dentist never takes their eyes off the tooth or their hands out of the mouth to reach for something. You bring it. Done well, it looks like one person with four hands — calm, quiet, fast.
Instruments are passed in the transfer zone — over the patient's chest, below the chin — never across the face. The classic exchange:
Passing is mechanical; anticipating is the craft. Once you know a procedure's sequence, you prepare the next step while the current one is happening:
You'll learn each sequence by watching, then doing. This handbook's Part 7 walks the main ones. Within a few weeks, the rhythm becomes yours.
Many materials are mixed or loaded at the exact moment they're needed — and many have a working time of seconds. You'll learn to prepare them on cue, fast and clean: impression material loaded as the tray is called, cement mixed the instant the dentist is ready, the curing light charged and waiting. Part 6 tells you what each material is and how it behaves.
The whole room is built so the patient feels nothing rushed and hears nothing clatter. Your movements are small, quiet and prepared. We don't reach across the patient, we don't hunt in drawers, and we don't break the calm. Smooth is fast.
The full chairside glossary — what each material is, what it's for, your job with it, and what to watch.
A nurse who knows the materials is worth their weight in gold — you'll prepare the right thing at the right moment without being told, and you'll spot when something's wrong. Use this as a reference. You won't memorise it in a week, and you don't need to.
This glossary teaches the categories — the actual brands on your Estepona shelves may differ. In week one, note the specific product your clinic uses for each, and where it's kept:
How we capture the shape of the teeth — increasingly digital here, but you'll see both.
A wand that builds a 3-D model of the teeth on screen — the heart of our Digital Smile Design.
A fast, cheap powder-and-water impression material for study models and guards.
A precise rubber impression in putty, heavy, medium and light "body" — used for accurate crown/veneer work and for making the mock-up stent.
A silicone the patient bites into, recording how the upper and lower teeth meet — so the lab builds to the right bite.
The carriers that hold impression material in the mouth — stock (ready-made) or custom.
Reference tabs to match tooth colour (VITA classical and 3D-Master; bleach shades BL1–BL4).
A sheet that seals off the teeth so they stay dry — essential for veneer cementation.
Absorbent rolls and squares to hold back saliva and keep the field dry; gauze for packing and clean-up.
A fine thread packed gently into the gum crease to push it back and expose the tooth margin for an accurate impression.
Stop minor bleeding and dry the gum crease (e.g. aluminium chloride, ferric sulphate; or a retraction paste).
This group bonds porcelain to tooth. The sequence matters and the timing is tight — learn this family well.
A blue gel that micro-roughens enamel so the bond grips. Rinsed off after a few seconds.
A thin resin "primer" painted on the etched tooth, then light-cured, that the cement locks into.
A coupling primer painted on the inside of the porcelain so cement bonds to it.
Water-soluble, shade-matched pastes used to preview a veneer's final colour before it's permanently cemented. Rinse off completely.
The permanent cement for veneers — light-cured or dual-cured, in matching shades. This is what makes the veneer one with the tooth.
A soft, removable cement (eugenol or non-eugenol) that holds temporaries in place between visits.
A fluoride-releasing cement/filling material that chemically sticks to tooth — used for some crowns, bases and fillings.
Etches the fitting surface of porcelain. Powerful — handled lab-side, not chairside, with strict care.
Tooth-coloured filling material, set hard by the curing light — flowable (runny, for thin layers) and packable (firm, for shaping). Used for repairs and edge bonding.
A fast-setting material for temporaries and the smile mock-up — the trial smile the patient wears before any tooth is touched.
Bands and wooden/plastic wedges that rebuild and seal the side of a tooth during a filling.
Thin coloured paper that marks high spots on the bite for adjustment.
This is what makes us, us. Understand it well enough to explain it simply.
A strong glass-ceramic that most clinics sell as their top tier. For us, it's the strength layer underneath — the floor, not the ceiling.
Our proprietary porcelain, hand-layered above the e-max by our own ceramists — body, neck warmth, mamelons, incisal halo, surface texture, then a semi-matte glaze (never high-shine). This optical layer is what makes a veneer look like the patient at their best, not like "teeth."
Our ceramists build colour from a structured shade map and your photographs — never from a single tab or a vague word like "a bit brighter." If the photos are in mixed lighting, or a shade tab is out of focus, the lab sends the case back. The precision you bring to capturing shade (Part 7.5) is the precision that comes back as the result.
The active gel for in-clinic whitening; the gums are protected with a barrier first.
A slower-release gel for custom take-home trays.
Soothes the short-lived sensitivity whitening can cause.
You prepare and pass these; the dentist administers. Knowing them keeps you fast and safe.
A numbing gel (benzocaine / lidocaine) applied before the injection so the patient barely feels it.
The injectable numbing (e.g. articaine or lidocaine, usually with adrenaline to make it last). Loaded into an aspirating syringe.
Short and long needles in different gauges; the syringe lets the dentist check they're not in a vessel.
Because we're a full-service adult practice, you'll also meet these. A working familiarity is plenty for now.
| Area | Materials you'll see |
|---|---|
| Root canals (endodontics) | Sodium hypochlorite (disinfecting irrigant — bleach-like, protect clothing & eyes), EDTA, files, gutta-percha (the rubbery root filling), sealer, paper points. |
| Extractions & surgery | Sterile saline, sutures, haemostatic sponge (collagen/gelatin to help clotting), gauze for the patient to bite on. |
| Implants | The implant kit (sterile, sequence-critical), sterile drapes and irrigation, sometimes bone graft and membrane. Strict surgical asepsis — your setup must be flawless. |
| Night guards / splints | Made from a model after an impression or scan; protect the new veneers at night. We treat the guard as part of the treatment, not an optional extra. |
The cutting/polishing tips for the handpieces — diamond (for cutting and prep), tungsten carbide (cutting and finishing), and polishers. Many shapes and grits.
Tiny disposable brushes for etch, bonding and silane.
For mixing and dispensing impression materials and cements.
Barrier film, disinfectant wipes, masks, gloves, eyewear (Part 2).
The smile-makeover journey, visit by visit — and exactly where you fit in each one. Built on our real protocols.
Most of your work will be the smile-makeover journey: a patient changing their smile with porcelain veneers. It unfolds across a few unhurried visits. Here's the whole arc, then your role at each step.
The first visit is a clinical conversation, not a sales call. The patient should leave with a plan they can sleep on. Your job is to make the room feel calm and the records perfect.
Photography here is clinical documentation, lab communication and consent — not marketing. If the photo set is incomplete, the treatment record is incomplete. The eight frames:
| 1 · Portrait | 5 · Upper arch (occlusal) |
| 2 · Profile (left & right) | 6 · Lower arch (occlusal) |
| 3 · Full smile, retracted | 7 · Lateral smile left · 45° |
| 4 · Full smile, relaxed | 8 · Lateral smile right · 45° |
Daylight-balanced strobe, no mixed colour temperatures, manual white balance, focus on the central incisors. A shade tab in focus, touching the central teeth, in at least one frame. For the relaxed smile, ask the patient to swallow, sit, and smile naturally — never "smile big." We re-shoot; we never retouch.
At preparation, you'll run suction and isolation (Part 4), pass instruments (Part 5), assist the impression or scan, help pack retraction cord, and place temporaries. Then the veneers come back from the lab for try-in.
At try-in we preview the result with try-in paste — set out in order centrals → laterals → canines — photograph before the patient sees it, then walk them to natural light. The coordinator hands the mirror, not the dentist. We never ask "do you like it?" We ask three structured questions, in order:
1. How does the length feel — too long, right, or too short?
2. How does the brightness feel — too bright, right, or too soft?
3. How does the shape feel — too sharp, right, or too round?
The patient's exact words are captured separately from the clinical translation — the lab adjusts on structured notes, never on adjectives.
Shade is the hardest thing to communicate in dentistry, and a single tab won't do it. We map five regions, each photographed separately with its own tab touching that region:
| Region | What it captures |
|---|---|
| Body | The dominant shade across the middle of the tooth. |
| Neck | The warmth near the gum. |
| Incisal | The translucency and effect at the biting edge. |
| Translucency | The depth and width of the see-through zone. |
| Character | Mamelons, white marks, halo, craze lines, surface stains. |
Seated upright (not reclined), daylight-balanced light only. Your care here is the difference between a veneer that looks placed and one that looks grown.
This is the moment the design becomes permanent. Everything before it was rehearsal. Your setup and your dry field carry this visit.
The dentist bonds in a fixed order — centrals first, laterals second, canines last — and bonds pairs symmetrically, never one side fully before the other. You keep the field bone-dry, manage the curing light, and clear excess cement. Then the bite is checked (static first, then the dynamic movements). The dam comes off, the patient sits up, and is walked to the natural-light window — where the coordinator hands the mirror and the dentist watches their first reaction. Final photographs, same eight angles, before they leave the room.
Aftercare runs on three touchpoints — a day-of message (within four hours, aftercare PDF attached), a 48-hour check-in (an open question — "how are you finding the new smile?" — never "any problems?"), and a two-week night-guard fitting. The night guard is part of the treatment, not optional — it protects the work. You'll all use the same sensitivity script so the patient hears one consistent explanation:
| Normal | Cold sensitivity, an occasional dull ache — typically from 48 hours up to ten days. |
| Not normal | Sharp pain on biting, throbbing at rest, anything escalating → the patient messages the studio's direct line. |
Beyond veneers, you'll set up and assist across our full adult scope. The fundamentals carry over — sterile setup, suction, transfer, the right tray:
| Treatment | Your focus |
|---|---|
| Whitening | Gum barrier, eye protection, timing, desensitiser, reassurance. |
| Hygiene cleaning | Aerosol control — mask and suction during ultrasonic scaling; airflow set-up. |
| Implants | Strict surgical asepsis, sterile sequence-critical kit, irrigation, calm for an anxious patient. |
| Invisalign / orthodontics | Scans, attachment placement (etch, composite, template), aligner handover and instructions. |
| Root canal | Rubber dam, irrigant handling (protect eyes/clothing), file organisation, magnification light. |
| Extraction / emergency | Reassurance first, surgical setup, gauze, post-op bleeding and aftercare instructions. |
You don't need to lead any of these in week one. You need to set the right tray, keep it sterile, keep the field clear, and keep the patient calm. Master those four and you can assist anything. The specifics come with the reps.
The ACE way at the chair. The clinical skill gets them the result; this is what makes them stay, and return, and tell people.
Our patients often fly in for us. Many have been let down before, or have quietly disliked their smile for years. How they feel in your care matters as much as the dentistry — and you are the person in the room with them the longest.
We treat nervousness as a real part of the case, not an annoyance. For a frightened patient, you are often the reason they stay in the chair. Small things matter enormously:
"A clinical conversation. Not a sales call."
Every patient should feel they were listened to, never pushed. We even, politely, decline or redirect roughly one in five enquiries when what they ask for isn't right for them. That restraint is part of why people trust us. You carry that same restraint at the chair.
Rare, but you must know them cold. What to watch for, and your first moves while help comes.
Medical emergencies in a dental chair are uncommon — but when one happens, calm, fast, correct action matters. You won't manage these alone; your job is to recognise early, call for help, and support the team. Learn this part, and refresh it often.
Spain's emergency number is 112. Fill in the rest before you ever work a clinical session:
Where the medical emergency kit & oxygen are kept: Where the AED (defibrillator) is, if on site: Named first-aiders / who leads in an emergency: Nearest hospital & the clinic's full address to give 112:
Most emergencies are foreseeable. Always make sure the patient's medical history is up to date and flagged for the dentist before treatment: allergies (especially latex, anaesthetic, penicillin), heart conditions, diabetes, asthma, epilepsy, blood thinners, pregnancy. A flagged history prevents most of what follows.
| Emergency | Signs | First moves (support the team) |
|---|---|---|
| Faint (syncope) | Pale, sweaty, dizzy, briefly loses consciousness. The most common. | Lay flat, raise the legs, loosen tight clothing, air. Usually recovers quickly. |
| Low blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) | Diabetic patient — shaky, confused, sweaty, irritable. | If conscious and able to swallow, fast sugar (glucose drink/gel). Escalate if not improving. |
| Allergic reaction / anaphylaxis | Rash, swelling of lips/face, wheeze, struggling to breathe, collapse. | Call for help & 112 immediately; the kit's adrenaline auto-injector; oxygen; nothing by mouth. |
| Asthma attack | Wheeze, breathless, can't speak in full sentences. | Sit up, their own blue inhaler, calm, oxygen; escalate if no improvement. |
| Chest pain / angina | Crushing chest pain, may spread to the arm/jaw. | Sit up, their GTN spray, oxygen; if not settling, treat as a heart attack — 112. |
| Seizure | Collapse, shaking, unresponsive. | Protect from injury, cushion the head, don't restrain or put anything in the mouth, time it. |
| Choking / swallowed item | Coughing, grasping the throat, can't breathe. | Encourage coughing; back blows and abdominal thrusts if it becomes severe; 112. |
| Anaesthetic reaction / collapse | Faint, palpitations or rapid deterioration after an injection. | Stop, lay flat, monitor breathing & pulse, oxygen, escalate. |
For anything serious: stop treatment, call the dentist and for help loudly, note the time, and call 112 if in any doubt. Bring the emergency kit and oxygen to the room. It is always better to call early and stand down than to wait and wish you'd called.
Clinic's needlestick / exposure procedure & who to report to: Your BLS / CPR training date & renewal:
A gentle path in — and the quick references you'll use until they're second nature.
Nobody expects you to know everything on day one. Here's a realistic way to grow into the role, and the reference cards worth keeping close.
We use the two-digit FDI system, standard across Europe. The mouth is split into four quadrants; the first digit is the quadrant (from the patient's upper-right, clockwise: 1, 2, 3, 4), the second is the tooth counting from the midline (1 = central incisor … 8 = wisdom tooth). So tooth 11 is the upper-right central incisor; 26 is an upper-left molar.
| HVE | High-volume evacuator (the big suction) |
| DSD | Digital Smile Design |
| PVS | Polyvinyl siloxane (addition silicone impression) |
| LA | Local anaesthetic |
| RCT | Root canal treatment (endodontics) |
| OHI | Oral hygiene instruction |
| PPE | Personal protective equipment |
| BLS | Basic life support |
| e-max | Lithium-disilicate ceramic (our strength layer) |
| BL2 | A bleach shade — our default veneer shade |
"Porcelain, pigment, precision — and the calm around it."
You're joining a studio that has chosen, again and again, to do things properly rather than quickly. Bring that same care to the small things — a dry field, a sterile pouch, a calm word to a nervous patient — and you'll be exactly the nurse ACE is known for. Welcome, Victoria. We're glad you're here.