Klaus F. Müller produced numerous instructional films on various implant systems and their prosthetic restoration from 1976-1982, to increase his scientific reputation as a practitioner dentist.
The partial underlay of the films with music and in some parts the bloody surgical representation was initially highly debated as it was a noventum for that time.
In addition to further training courses, contributed in particular the boost in innovation and the associated focus on moving images significantly to the spread of new dental implantological techniques in Europe.
Digitalization of historical operation films has been initiated to save this archive (see, for example, Category: Klaus F. Müller Wikimedia Commons) Müller's friendship with the American engineer Thomas D. Driskell (Bicon) led to a number of publications and further education films about Synthodont, Titanodont, Titanaloy and Synthograft [6][7][8][9] [10][11] (products of Miter company) from 1982 till 1985.
Some of these innovations were inside chilled drills, bone management, special mucosal punches for minimal invasive operations or plastic splinting with UV light hardening.
During Müller's tenure as chairman of the committee for register and qualification at BDIZ/EDI (1993–2003), he established criteria and standards for the dental implantology in cooperation with P. Ehrl and Helmut B.
Product defects or errors in the batch must be reported to the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (Germany:BfArM) and they are stored in a database.