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roots - international magazine of endodontology No. 2, 2017

| practice management lighting Fig. 2a: 3-D visualisation of situation from Figure 1a. Lighting is designed using requirements for office workplaces. The installation does not respect additional task areas. Fig. 2b: 3-D visualisation of situation from Figure 1b. An insight into a model room with a directional/indirectional panel luminaire and additional luminaires to respect additional task areas. Fig. 2a Fig. 2b even the very basic requirement of task illumination is often neglected. Also task background and overall illumination are often far too low, which has both eye and overall fatigue im plications. As little as 30 lx have been repeatedly measured on the material prepara- tion areas and computer desks. Many surgeries in- stalled in existing buildings kept the original (office) luminaires, not quite following the lighting project. These systems were often projected according to an old standard that required as little as 300 lx for office work. Savings on lighting tend to generate much larger expenses later. The need for light grows with age. Editorial note: This article was first published in cosmetic dentistry magazine 1/2017. References [1] EN 12464-1:2011 Light and lighting—Lighting of work places— Part 1: Indoor work places. [2] Czech Government Regulation No. 361/2007 establishing the conditions of occupational health protection. [3] EN ISO 9680:2007 Dentistry—Operating lights (repl. 2014). [4] Fuksa, Antonín. Lighting in dental surgeries. StomaTeam. 2/2014. ISSN 1214-147X. [5] Svoboda, Filip. Lighting in dental surgeries in Romania— a summary report. Personal communication, 2015. Other parameters of lighting like uniformity, glare, colour rendering or non-visual effects of light and light- ing control will be discussed later in a dedicated article. about Lighting the surgery with office luminaires only is not sufficient to fulfil basic requirements. Lighting using a single, powerful central luminaire provides enough light in the visual task area, but may easily fail to meet additional requirements. That is why additional luminaires are needed to provide back- ground area illumination and uniformity._ Antonín Fuksa graduated (MSc) in 2000 at the Czech Technical University in Prague, Faculty of Electrical Engineering in the field of study Measurement and instrumentation. He currently works as a developer of intelligent luminaires, smart lighting systems and chronobiological phototherapy devices in NASLI. 40 roots 2 2017

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