Hands-on on Human cadaver (Cremona, 18-19 September 2026)
🌍 Europe Oral Surgery

Hands-on on Human cadaver (Cremona, 18-19 September 2026)

👁 87 views
📅
Date
18–19 Sep 2026
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Location
Palazzo Trecchi, Cremona, Lombardy, Italy
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Organizer
Osteobiol
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Price
2,500 EUR
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About this event

A punctual knowledge of the anatomical structures in the mandibular and maxillary areas can improve the success of your daily clinical procedures.

By practicing and mimicking surgical procedures on human cadavers, anatomical structures (like nerves, blood vessels, etc.) and their location within the mandibular and maxillary areas can be observed in a scenario resembling what you will experience in your patients.

A punctual knowledge of the anatomical structures in the mandibular and maxillary areas can improve the success of your daily clinical procedures.
By practicing and mimicking surgical procedures on human cadavers, anatomical structures (like nerves, blood vessels, etc.) and their location within the mandibular and maxillary areas can be observed in a scenario resembling what you will experience in your patients.

Registration fee includes all lectures and Friday social dinner at Ristorante “Il Violino”. Registrations fee € 2.500 (plus VAT when applicable)

Confirmed Speakers

🎤 Prof. Tiziano Testori
🎤 Dr. Gabriele Rosano

Why Attend

Participants will be able to learn:

- “clinical oriented” dissection on cadaver of the related muscle and neurovascular tissues
- how to prevent and manage intra- and post- haemorrhage and neurosensorial complications
- the application of the main basic and advanced techniques of regenerative surgery around dental implants, including the biomaterial grafting.

About Cremona

Cremona lies in the heart of the Po Valley (Pianura Padana), surrounded by fertile agricultural land. It's about 85 km southeast of Milan and roughly equidistant between Brescia and Piacenza.

Founded as a Roman colony in 218 BC, Cremona was one of the earliest Latin settlements in the Po Valley. It changed hands many times over the centuries — through Lombards, Franks, and various medieval lords — before eventually becoming part of the Duchy of Milan and later the Habsburg Empire. It joined unified Italy in 1859.

The historic center is remarkably well-preserved, centered on Piazza del Comune, one of Italy's finest medieval squares. Key landmarks include the Romanesque Cathedral of Cremona (Duomo), the Torrazzo — one of the tallest brick bell towers in the world at 112 meters — the Baptistery, and the Loggia dei Militi.