Silver
or tooth colored fillings
Composite resin dental fillings
were created as an alternative
to traditional metal dental fillings.
Tooth fillings colored to look
like a natural tooth are known
as Composite Resin Dental Fillings
and are made of a plastic dental
resin combined with porcelain
and glass particles. These types
of fillings are, durable and are
way more natural looking than
amalgam fillings.
If you have a cavity
in a tooth or broken fillings or
if your teeth are full of mercury
fillings, or amalgam fillings you
may want to ask your dentist about
changing to composite dental fillings
. Mercury fillings or amalgam fillings
can easily be removed and replaced
with far more attractive colored
fillings. Research shows that composite
fillings actually strengthen your
tooth and further protect it from
decay.
Root
canal treatment
Your dentist, may have suggested
to you that Root Canal Therapy
(otherwise known as Endodontic)
was needed for a particular tooth.
He may have briefly discussed
some of the facts concerning the
procedures involved in root canal
therapy, but perhaps you would
like some more information.
Earlier, a badly infected tooth,
or one that just had significant
decay, was doomed to be extracted.
Today, the majority of these teeth
can be salvaged by the Root Canal
Specialist.
An extraction is truly the last
resort!
Some indications of the need for
root canal treatment may be:
• Spontaneous
pain or throbbing while biting
• Sensitivity
to hot and cold foods
• Severe
decay or an injury that creates
an abscess (infection) in the
bone
Root Canal Treatment
consists of:
The removal of the infected or
irritated nerve tissue that lies
within the root of the tooth.
It is this infected pulp tissue
that causes an eventual abscess.
The first step in a root canal
is to obtain access to the nerve.
This is accomplished by establishing
a small access opening in the
top of the tooth. It will be done
under a local anesthetic.
The length of the root canal is
determined and the infected pulp
is removed.
At the same visit, the canal where
the nerve is located will be reshaped
and prepared to accept a special
root canal filling material. The
number of visits necessary to
complete your root canal will
depend upon several factors including
the number of nerves in the tooth,
the infected state of the nerve,
and the complexity of the procedure.
The final step in your root canal
will be the sealing of the root
canal with a sterile, plastic
material called gutta percha.
This is done in order to prevent
possible future infection. If
treated early, root canal therapy
need not be uncomfortable. With
the use of local anesthetics,
the entire procedure can be totally
painless.
The success rates for
Root Canal Therapy have been reported
to be as high as 95%.
Sometimes when there has been
long standing infection or abscess,
there may be some soreness associated
with the root canal visit. If
this should turn out to be true,
you will be given specific instructions
to follow to minimize the discomfort.
When an infection is present,
it may be necessary to take an
antibiotic. If pain should be
present, analgesics may need to
be prescribed.
The tooth will then possibly need
a post and core and a crown in
order to re-establish normal form
and function. This decision will
be based upon several additional
factors.
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