The Wand System

Comfortable, Needle‑Free Anaesthesia

A modern alternative to traditional dental injections, designed to make your treatment as comfortable as possible. For patients who feel anxious about injections, The Wand offers a calmer, more reassuring experience — helping you relax while we take care of your smile.

How The Wand works

A comfortable dental experience often begins with how local anaesthetic is delivered. The Wand is an advanced system designed to make dental treatment more gentle and precise than traditional injections.

Unlike a standard syringe, The Wand uses computer-assisted technology to control the flow and pressure of the anaesthetic with exceptional accuracy. This allows the anaesthetic to be applied only where it’s needed — typically around the tooth being treated — through a method known as Single Tooth Anaesthesia (STA).

Traditional local anaesthetic can numb a larger area of the mouth, which may make speaking or eating difficult afterwards and increase the risk of accidental biting. The Wand’s targeted approach helps avoid these issues by numbing only the treatment site while keeping the surrounding areas unaffected.

Benefits of The Wand

No traditional syringe

The Wand replaces the conventional needle with a slim, pen-like handpiece that helps reduce treatment-related anxiety.

Accurate & gentle delivery

Its computer-guided system maintains a steady, optimal flow rate for a more comfortable experience.

Targeted anaesthesia

Only the tooth being treated is numbed, preventing unnecessary numbness in the lips, tongue, or cheeks.

Efficient process

The anaesthetic takes effect almost immediately, allowing dental treatment to begin promptly and smoothly..

Clinical research from universities in the USA and Europe has demonstrated multiple advantages of this approach, including:

  • Controlled delivery that stays below discomfort thresholds.

  • Reduced dosage of anaesthetic solution

  • Elimination of extended numbness that can affect speech or facial movement.

References:

American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry. Guideline on the Use of Local Anesthesia for Pediatric Dental Patients. Pediatric Dentistry, October 2016.

European Journal of Paediatric Dentistry, April 2018.

See also