|
Dear Dr. Burchman,
You have changed my life when it comes
to visiting the dentist, and one of the things I respect most
about you is your passion for the job...
Sincerely,
Laura P
Dr. Burchman,
I visited your office this week and
was very impressed with you and your staff. I appreciate your
concern for me without ever having met me before. My visit was
truly a pleasure, thank you very much.
Jennifer G

 |
Sent: July 2007
Dear Dr. Burchman,
Thank you so much for your services
again this year. Your kindness is truely appreciated. Thanks
to your friendly staff too.
You are the best!
Dan, Dana & Luke D
Ira & Nastya D
|
 |
|
|
Wow! A painless cleaning.
Sent: Monday, April 29, 2002 11:32
AM
To: nobodycries@drhightech.com
Subject: Many thanks to Dr. Burchman and staff
Dear Dr. Burchman and Staff:
Wow! A painless cleaning I want to
say thanks for the great experience I had today on my first visit
to your office. I am so impressed by Dr. Burchman, the staff
and the high-tech equipment that made my dental visit such a
real pleasure. I never thought I would put the words 'pleasure'
and 'dental visit' in the same sentence. And I was especially
amazed by Dr. Burchman's medical knowledge of my chronic fatigue
syndrome and how adrenaline and ephinerine (sp?) can affect my
immune system. That was just incredible.
God bless you all!
Paul L.
Morrisville, PA
|
|
Phenomenal experience with
Dr. Burchman!
Posted by mcallist at June 17, 2003
10:57 AM
I went to the Dentist for the first
time in about 4 or 5 years the other day. I was prompted to go
because my upper right wisdom tooth sort of crumbled when I threw
a quarters worth of circle tabs in my mouth after lunch. I had
been planning a trip to the dentist for a year or so, and just
never got around to it. This event helped me re-arranged my priorities.
The first trip I went to my regular dentist from when I was a
child. He looked at it took and X-ray and suggested it be extracted.
Said it was fairly well decayed. So today I will have #1 extracted,
hopefully that isn't too bad. But I decided in the mean time
I should have a checkup and a cleaning.
Mike had previously told me about Doctor
Mel Burchman, and his hi-tech dentistry, no drills, etc. So I
decided to check it out. Well all I can say about my experience
with Dr. Burchman is that it was phenomenal. I am used to the
1 - 2 hour appointment for x-ray, cleaning, poking and scaling
of the teeth. Where you spend 95% of the time with a dental technician
and the dentist pokes his head in to sign off on their work.
Well the trip to see Dr. High Tech was quite different. I was
there for no longer than 40 minutes. The X-ray was done at a
single shot, rather than sticking a bunch of film in your mouth
and then pointing that X-Ray gun at your head. They had this
device that just spun around your head, and put your full mouth
X-Ray on a single piece of film, and it was placed where you
could see it. Then about 30 minutes were spent with the Doctor
examining the X-Ray, finding all the cavities, I have 10 :-(
And showing you pictures of the decaying teeth up on the rooms
TV. Then there was the best part, the cleaning. He used this
high powered sandblaster, basically just a strong water pick,
and cleaned all my teeth in about 3 minutes, with no scraping
and minimal gum poking, then I was finished.
I went back yesterday to have
some of the cavities filled, again it was about 30 minutes with
the Doctor, where he used an even stronger sandblaster to removed
the decayed material from my teeth, and then patched up the three
newly formed holes with some type of natural colored filling
and a laser. No Novocain, and only a couple short periods of
slight discomfort. When he was sandblasting the tooth, I felt
a hot sensation when he was lasering the tooth, and finally the
buffer/polisher he used to clean up the patch jobs a little was
slightly uncomfortable. But the entire visit took exactly 35
minutes. I need to go back twice more to finish the job, but
I can see myself going to this dentist twice a year for my cleanings,
because it is so quick and hassle-free. That should prevent these
marathons of cavity filling.
|