Open your dental CT scan in the browser. View CBCT and DICOM files slice by slice, explore MPR and 3D views when the scan supports them, and understand what your dentist or oral surgeon is showing you.
Upload Your Dental CT ScanDrop a dental CBCT ZIP, DICOM folder, OneVolume export, or Sirona GALILEOS volume. The viewer organizes supported files locally in your browser.
Move through slices, switch to MPR when geometry is valid, and use 3D volume rendering for CT and CBCT scans that contain real volumetric data.
Ask for a plain-language explanation of selected rendered views. Raw DICOM files stay in your browser; AI analysis sends selected views only when requested.
Dental CBCT scans can look intimidating. The viewer prioritizes clear slice navigation, simple controls, and patient-friendly explanation paths.
CBCT and CT scans contain voxel volumes, so 3D rendering can show teeth, jawbone, sinuses, and impacted teeth. Single dental X-rays remain 2D.
Presets are tuned for tooth structure, cortical bone, soft tissue, sinus review, and high-density anatomy.
Use the viewer to understand what your dentist, orthodontist, endodontist, or oral surgeon is discussing before an appointment.
Yes. A CBCT scan is a 3D volume, while a normal dental X-ray is a 2D projection. That is why CBCT can support MPR and 3D viewing.
Yes. CBCT is often used to understand impacted wisdom teeth, root shape, jawbone, and proximity to the mandibular canal.
No. The viewer helps you inspect and understand your scan. Optional AI explanation is informational and does not replace a dental or radiology interpretation.
Your files never leave your browser. All parsing and rendering happens client-side using JavaScript. We cannot see, access, or store your medical images. When you close the tab or clear data, your files are gone.
Standard DICOM CBCT exports are the priority. The import pipeline also targets common dental volume exports such as OneVolume CT_0.vol and Sirona GALILEOS folders.
See all supported dental CBCT formats → for the complete list.
Stuck opening your scan? See how to open a dental CBCT file.