Indications for Use and Hazards of Dental Amalgam Flashcards

1
Q

History of dental amalgam

A

7th century paste used in China
1800s in Europe
1830s introduced to North America from France
1970s high-Cu alloys developed

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2
Q

Composition of dental amalgam

A

Hg
Alloy:
-low copper: 70% silver, 25% tin, 4% copper, other traces
-high copper: 50% silver, 25% tin, 30% copper, other traces
These react to form ‘amalgam’

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3
Q

Useful properties of amalgam

A
  • good compressive strength
  • good balance of working & setting times
  • fair resistance to marginal leakage
  • minimal dimensional change on setting
  • relatively resistant to contamination
  • nearly 200 years of scientific development
  • low cost
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4
Q

Limitations of amalgam

A
  • not adhesive to tooth
  • brittle in thin sections
  • alloy/ Hg proportions critical
  • detectable levels of creep
  • corrosion can weaken
  • affected by water during setting reaction
  • toxic components
  • unaesthetic
  • not minimally invasive
  • costly
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5
Q

Indications for use of amalgam

A
  • Posterior teeth
  • When too late for prevention
  • When adhesive restoration not indicated (occlusal load/ too big/ isolation from moiture)
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6
Q

Cavity design for amalgam was created by

A

Developed from work by G.V Black in 1897

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7
Q

How are amalgam restorations retained?

A

Mechanical ‘lock’ of restoration

  • undercuts (can e subtle)
  • occlusal lock
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8
Q

How do amalgam restorations resist occlusal forces?

A
  • at least 2mm thick
  • no feather edges (cavosurface angle)
  • consider effects of creep: floor perp. to occlusal forces
  • smooth internal angles
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9
Q

Hazards of mercury

A
  • Neurotoxic
  • Adversely affects renal function
  • Cumulative in body & environment
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10
Q

Hazards of alloy components

A

Tin and silver compounds considered hazardous to environment

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11
Q

What was the phase-down of amalgam mostly driven by?

A

Environmental concerns e.g. 1997 use dicouraged in Sweden

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12
Q

When is the European phase down of amalgam to be completed by?

A

2030 (agreed at Minamata Convention in 2013)
2000 amalgam free dental schools in Holland
2008 banned in Sweden, Denmark, Norway

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13
Q

Risk management for amalgam

A
  • PPE
  • avoid in pregnancy
  • Use capsules (< exposure, optimises trituration)
  • aspiratory and isolation
  • proper disposal
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14
Q

Isolating the cavity

A

Free of debris
Dry but not dessicated
Isolated to maintain dryness througout procedure

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15
Q

Triturate amalgam

A

Capsule
‘Amalgamator’
Use trays

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16
Q

Place and condense amalgam

A

Amalgam carrier (clean & functional)
Condensers/ pluggers (appropriate p and size)
-add layers
-press all parts together
-above cavity margin (remove Hg-rich layer)

17
Q

Burnishing

A

Pear-ended/ Ladmore burnisher

  • Initiates fissures
  • Condenses margins
18
Q

Carving

A

During plastic phase, removes Hg-rich layer

-develops anatomy (occlusion, food shedding, resists corrosion)

19
Q

Finishing

A

Adjust occlusion & morphology
Reduces corrosion
Aesthetics
Wait 24 hours

20
Q

Stages of amalgam application

A
Isolate cavity
Triturate amalgam
Place
Condense
Burnish
Carve
Finish
21
Q

Should we use amalgam for majority of restorations?

A

No, composite