Dental Chair and its journey in stamps

Recently I visited a Dentist, and within minutes I was lying on a Dental Chair. With lights from the top, motorized probes and instruments jetting from the sides, and even an adjoining basin, I wondered how dentists developed their chairs. This journey is also reflected in a few postage stamps, issued to recognize dental services and professionals in various countries.

Literally grounded for a painful tooth

Till 18th century, the person whose tooth required to be extracted, would sit kneel down on the floor. The dentist would then stand, often holding the person’s head between two knees. Tooth would then be pulled, leaving the person in tremendous pain. There was neither a chair, nor any concept of anesthesia.

Postage stamp from San Merino, 1979  The image is based on a 15th-century woodcut. It shows St. Apollonia holding a pair of pincers, which is her traditional symbol. A person whose tooth is removed, sits kneel down. St. Apollonia is patron saint of dental suffering, because her own teeth were forcibly pulled out during her martyrdom in Alexandria in 249 AD
From ground to chairs

First dental chairs, were probably household chairs, with a high back and an arm rest. These fixed chairs were first recommended by Pierre Fauchard, who is known as the father of modern dentistry. However, the credit for first mechanical dental chair goes to an American dentist Josiah Flagg in 1790. He devised an adjustable headrest, and a wider arm-rest. Head of the person was to be kept tilted, with neck extended. Dentist would place instruments on the arm-rest.

In 1830 James Snell added a foot-stool, reclining back-support and a candle holder available right next to the chair. As per his description, patient should be well rested and operator comfortable. Further, he remarked that this invention “..finally relieved the patient from having to hold a candle when the dentist required..

Pierre Fauchard, who is known as the father of modern dentistry, in a postage stamp from France, 1961
Dental chair becomes an industry

Advent of anesthesia in 1840s, expanded the scope of Dentistry. Industrialization and demand fulled Dental Chairs to be mass produced. In 1844, Samuel Stockton White opened the S.S. White Manufacturing company, and expanded production from tooth molds to instruments and furniture. Till 1870s, the chairs were made with wood and metal contractions to allow for tilt. By 1890s we had all metal chairs, with padded seats, and rests for head, back and feet. All its angles could be adjusted with a metal cranking wheel. It also had a spittoon and a rotating instrument tray.

A dental chair from 1890s, seen in this postage stamp from Thailand (1990). Please see that this chair has a metal body, and a manual cranking system to adjust its angulation. The accessories and attachments include an instrument tray, mirror, candle stand and a spittoon.

Metal cranking systems, gave way to hydraulics and foot-pedals that could lift the chair up and down. Candles gave way to electric bulbs and better illumination. By 1950s, we had a prototype of chairs similar to today. In 1958, Dr. Sanford Golden and colleagues in California designed the Ritter-Euphorian or Golden, a fixed-seat reclining chair. This and its further generation of chairs were electric driven, had a lighter weight and allowed a more complete recline.

Grenada, 1983. A person on a dental chair, see the lamp and the instrument tray
St Helena, 1971. A dentist with manual instruments hanging from the top
First day cover, India 1988. The cover shows a chair that can be fully reclined. The light attachment comes from the top, and the dentist comfortably sits on a chair. Spittoon has given way to a sink, with a drainage.
More mechanics and a greater comfort

Dental tools were also changing. Mechanical hand-held tools, gave way to motorized instruments. These electric powered tools were now connected to the chair, with contraptions that could hold them when not in use.

Papua New Guinea, 1964. Note that one of the instruments held by operator is now electrically powered, and connected with a long wire in a tub.
Netherlands, 1980. Note thee fully reclined chair. Light source and instruments have another attachment. Also seen is a basin and a sink.
Motorized Dental instruments, this 1998 postage stamp from Thailand shows some of them, with a long tubing, that carries electric power to drive them.

Modern dental chairs are fully adjustable, are on a pedestal, and have an engine , that generates power to drive pneumatic instruments and suck secretions as Dentists operate. More recent ones also come with an inbuilt-screen and an digital X-ray unit. The struggles of the people who is now getting their teeth worked upon, are now limited to mere opening of their jaws. I wonder, if over the years this too may become a thing of the past.

Thailand, 1985. A person being treated on a Dental chair with all its attachments. Her jaw is comfortably open to allow for the procedures being done.

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