Class II amalgam restorations Flashcards

1
Q

Embrasure

A

V-shaped valleys between adjacent teeth

-provide spill way for food to escape during chewing which essentially aids in self-cleansing process

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2
Q

Retention

A

Use pear-shaped bur

Undercut

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3
Q

Manipulation and adaptation of amalgam

A

Good condensation / effective packing to ensure marginal seal

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4
Q

What needs to be considered

A

Method of retention for material of choice
Prevention of recurrent caries - elimination of microleakage
Assist remineralisation of tooth tissue
Longevity under occlusal load - fracture and wear resistance
Protect tooth from mechanical failure
Aesthetics

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5
Q

Class II

A

Lesions occurring between posterior teeth only

Size can vary from moderate involvement to bulk loss of tooth structure

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6
Q

Direct restorative materials

A

Classified as plastic i.e. readily deformable when first mixed
Placed into prepared cavity whilst still in that condition
Modelled/ moulded into appropriate shape e.g. amalgam

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7
Q

Class II cavity preps if interproximal

A

Have to drill all the way down through marginal ridge

Try to keep thin enamel at base

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8
Q

Define D1, D2, D3, D4

A

D1: initial caries
D2: enamel caries
D3: caries of dentine
D4: pulpal involvement

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9
Q

Isthmus

A

Central portion of cavity prep on the occlusal surface of a bicuspid or molar
You have cut it too wide
Try to keep it as narrow as possible

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10
Q

Iatrogenic damage

A

Operator damage e.g. on adjacent tooth
Would fail exam
Must inform patient - candour
Avoid by using matrix band

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11
Q

Axial grooves or locks

A

For added retention

Locks in dentine not enamel (enamel will shatter)

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12
Q

Axial wall

A

Wall closest to pulp
Don’t cut too deep
Maybe put liner there to protect it

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13
Q

Principles of cavity prep

A

Do not damage adjacent tooth
Access should be sufficient to allow adequate visualisation of caries and to allow complete removal
Prepare below contact point
Prepare just into embrasures so that margins are visible and can be finished well
Do not leave unsupported enamel at margins
Removal of caries at ADJ

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14
Q

Wooden wedge

A

To separate contact point

-for adapting a matrix band to the proximal part of a cavity

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15
Q

Ditching

A

Marginal breakdown

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16
Q

Marginal ridge

A

Rounded borders that form the mesial and distal margins of the occlusal surface of a tooth
Meant to deflect food from fossa, stops food from getting trapped in contact area

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17
Q

Indirect restorative materials

A

Materials usually formed in lab and finished restoration cemented into placed, e.g. Full Gold Crown

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18
Q

Slot and box

A

1 - 1.5mm deep box like grooves prepared in dentine to > SA

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19
Q

Occlusal lock

A

Dovetail

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20
Q

Changing concepts

A
Improved amalgams
Instruments with v small working points
Amalgam bonding systems
Adhesive restorative materials
'If in doubt prevent' rather than 'if in doubt fill'
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21
Q

Principles of cavity prep

A

Do not damage adjacent tooth
Access should be sufficient to allow adequate visualisation of caries and to allow complete removal
Prepare below contact point
Prepare just into embrasures so that margins are visible and can be finished well
Do not leave unsupported enamel at margins
Allow sufficient depth for amalgam, at least 2mm
Remove all caries from ADJ

22
Q

When to extend or not: if proximal lesion visible

A

If proximal lesion visible & access good then marginal ridge can be conserved

23
Q

When to extend or not: if proximal lesion is not visible, access is difficult or there is <2mm tooth structure below marginal ridge (occluso-gingivally)

A

Access through marginal ridge advised

This will produce a small box form sufficient to eliminate lesion

24
Q

When to extend or not: if tooth is caries free occlusally

A

NOT necessary to cut out the fissure

25
Q

Extension is a balance

A

Between conservation of tooth structure and need to remove defective tooth structure

26
Q

When to extend or not: where occlusal caries and/ or removal of an old restoration have required extending occlusally

A

An occlusal lock/ dovetail can be prepared to retain the approximal part of the restoration

27
Q

Where is initial cut made in Class II prep? What bur should be used?

A

Initial cut made through marginal ridge to penetrate caries and then widened bucco-lingually
Diamond pear shaped bur or tungsten carbide bur

28
Q

Proximal plate

A

Can be fractured off with a hand instrument to avoid damage to adjacent tooth (or can you use a matrix band)

29
Q

What would you remove the proximal wall with?

A

Gingival margin trimmer

30
Q

Most important place for caries to be removed from

A

ADJ

31
Q

What is the size of the cavity determined by?

A

Determined by size of carious lesion, extension beyond this should be minimal

32
Q

How is retention from occlusal forces derived?

A

From a 2-5 degree divergence of the walls towards floor in both parts of the prep

33
Q

Where should the margins of the box extend to

A

Just outside the contact area unless caries dictates otherwise

34
Q

Exception to box design

A

When using adhesive materials e.g. composite

35
Q

Principles of retention for amalgams

A

Relies on mechanical interlocks

A degree of adhesion can be developed through use of luting or bonding agents

36
Q

What type of restorative material is an amalgam classed as?

A

Direct plastic restorative material

37
Q

Cavo surface angle

A

Above 70 degrees, preferably 90 degrees to prevent ditching

38
Q

Accepted minimal dimensions for amalgam

A

2mm occlusally and 1mm - 1.5mm elsewhere i.e. proximal box

Sufficient bulk to prevent fracture, max thickness of dentine protecting bulk

39
Q

Deep preps

A

May require base or liner

40
Q

Proximal box area

A

Fractured margins need to be planed with gingival margin trimmer to remove fragile enamel prisms, which could break off and affect marginal seal

41
Q

Proximal box design amalgam

A

Retention grooves places B&L 0.5mm deep to ADJ (dentine) gingivally, fading away occlusally, rounded in cross section
Directed laterally not pulpally

42
Q

Extension onto occlusal surface

A

Prone to fracture at isthmus therefore sufficient depth must be provided here
Width of isthmus should not be over-cut
Axio-pulpal line angle should be rounded or bevelled to reduce risk of amalgam fracture

43
Q

Matrix bond and wedges

A

Avoid creation of overhang at cervical margin

Ensure good contact point with adjacent tooth

44
Q

Matrix systems purpose

A

Substitute for missing walls
Create contact point
Restrict extrusion of amalgam and formation of overhangs or ledges
Provide contour for proximal surface restoration
Allow adequate surface texture in areas inaccessible to burnishing

45
Q

Types of matrices

A
Siqveland
Tofflemire
Automatrix
Omnimatrix and luciwedges
'V' ring/ half band matrices
46
Q

Contour

A

Conves side of spoon excavator used to impart convex contour to matrix band
Achieve good contact area with adjacent tooth
Ensure dental floss placed below contact point to assist removal of ledges & excess amalgam

47
Q

Condensing amalgam

A

Using amalgam pluggers or condenser
Adaptation of amalgam to walls of prep
Eliminating voids
Incremental placement of 1mm thickness essential to ensure max condensation

48
Q

Carving

A

Wards carver e.g. No 2 or excavator

Marginal ridge should be carved, taking care not to over carve or miscarve

49
Q

Post carve burnishing

A

Light rubbing over surface of carved amalgam with burnisher

Do not use heavy forces, avoid margins

50
Q

If amalgam soft after carving

A

Wipe with cotton roll saturated in water to proved additional smoothing

51
Q

After burnishing

A

Check occlusion