How Teeth Are Restored
After diagnosing the problem and devising a treatment plan, the next step to restore a tooth to health is to make you comfortable. We give you a local anesthetic so you do not feel any discomfort. After the decay is removed, the tooth is designed to receive either a direct restoration or an indirect restoration.
A direct restoration means the tooth can likely be restored in one visit and that there is sufficient tooth structure for the filling to go inside the tooth or at least sufficient tooth structure to maintain the majority of the natural tooth. Examples of direct restorations are amalgam, which is silver colored and composite, which is tooth colored. There have been more amalgam fillings placed worldwide than any other fillings but the tooth-colored fillings are being placed more than amalgam fillings these days because of their superior esthetic qualities.
An indirect filling means the restoration is made outside of your mouth, either by a lab or by a milling machine. An indirect filling also needs to be cemented into place. Examples of indirect restorations are crowns, inlays and onlays. A crown covers the entire tooth, an inlay fits inside the tooth and can replace a wall of the tooth, and an onlay replaces at least one cusp of the tooth.
Most indirect restorations take two or more appointments to complete, with the exception of restorations that are milled by a machine in the office. Cast gold is the most durable indirect restoration material but porcelain ceramics are gaining in popularity because of their superior esthetic qualities.
Composite Resin
Composite fillings are also called plastic or tooth colored fillings. Getting this kind of filling depends on where the tooth is in your mouth. There is a lot of force applied to the back teeth when we bite so size and location is important when deciding to use this type of restoration.
To place this filling, we remove all decay and other filling material from your tooth. A bonding material is placed and then the composite resin is put into the prepared tooth in thin layers. Each layer gets hard with the help of a special light that we hold over the tooth to cure the material. When the last layer of the filling is hard, we shape the material so it looks and feels natural.
Advantages
Tooth colored
Single visit
Conservative tooth preparation
Does not corrode
Disadvantages
May wear faster than other materials
Occasional sensitivity
Cost more than amalgam
Higher occurrence of recurrent decay
Porcelain
Porcelain is the most life-like of the choices we have to restore teeth. It is used either by itself in veneers, inlays, onlays, and crowns as well as combined with metal for crowns. Porcelain restorations require two visits or they can be milled in the office with a milling machine. After the porcelain is cemented to your tooth, it is very difficult to notice that the tooth had any treatment at all.
Advantages
Advantages
Color
Resistance to surface wear
Long lasting
Disadvantages
Expensive
Brittle material can fracture
Requires multiple visits