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Article
Alternatives
to Dental Fillings
The
treatment recommendation for a dental cavity
is based primarily on the diagnostic classification
of the stages of the disease progression.
The main criteria are: (1) carious lesions
without pulpal involvement (these lesions
are normally small and do not have any pain
symptom); and (2) carious lesions with pulpal
involvement (these lesions are normally
large and cause painful symptom).
The carious lesions without pulpal involvement
are divided into three subtypes:
1. Incipient caries lesion - The decay area
is limited to the outermost layer of the
tooth (enamel). The best treatment for the
incipient caries consists of fissurotomy,
preventive filling, and sealant. These procedures
always can be performed without the use
of local anesthetics (numbing shots).
2. Moderate carious lesion - The decay area
completely penetrates through the enamel
layer of the tooth and reaches the dentin
layer. Most dentists recommend amalgam and
composite fillings for these lesions. These
procedures may require the use of local
anesthetics. About 95% of the operations
can be done without the numb shot, when
an air abrasion or a hard tissue laser is
used to remove the decay.
3. Advanced carious lesion - The decay area
is within the dentin layer but not reaches
the pulp yet. The treatment commonly recommended
for these advanced lesions includes indirect
(laboratory) porcelain or gold inlays, onlays,
and partial crowns. The procedure is done
by taking the impression of the defect,
making a porcelain or gold restoration in
the dental laboratory, and cementing the
restoration to the defected tooth. Normally
it would take two dental visits to finish
the operation; however, the dentist can
complete the whole operation in one seating,
if the CEREC (CAD/CAM) technology is available.
The carious lesions with pulpal involvement
are also divided into two subtypes:
1. Severe carious lesion with reversible
pulpitis - The decay area is approaching
the pulp and causing pulpal inflammatory
hyperemia. Cold and hot application to the
normally increases the pain; however, the
pain disappears quickly after the stimulus
is removed. The electrical pulp testing
for the tooth in question shows normal vitality
reading. The common treatment recommendation
for these lesions consists of a direct or
indirect pulp capping with a calcium hydroxyl
appetite medication (dycal), placing a temporary
sedative filling (IRM) on the defect for
4-6 weeks, and restoring it with the final
restoration once the pain symptom completely
disappears. Because the insurance companies
typically do not pay for the sedative fillings,
some patients elect to place the permanent
restoration immediately. These patients
take the risk of paying in full for the
retreatment, when the inflamed pulp fails
to reverse to its healthy state.
2. Severe carious lesion with irreversible
pulpitis - The decay area reaches the pulp
and causes constant toothache. Cold and
hot application increases pain and the pain
lingers for more than 30 seconds after the
stimulus is removed. The tooth is sensitive
to slight tapping and touching. The electrical
pulp test shows abnormal vitality reading.
The recommended treatment for these lesions
is either a root canal therapy with a final
crown or a tooth extraction with a final
bridge or implant restoration.
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