Rubber Dam and amalgam
a dry field provides delayed expansion of amalgam
Pin placement dimensions
Used to retain large restorations (prevent lateral displacement in occlusion), although they weaken the material.
Max of 4 = Place one per missing line angle…not cusp!!!
Large diameter/largest pins
Coat with adhesion (4-META) materials increases fracture resistance of cores.
If hits pulp a vital tooth: stop bleeding –> dry –> CaOH
If pin perforates, place pin but don’t et it extend out to the surface
Place pins:
2 mm in amalgam (any restorative material)
2 mm in dentin
0.5 - 1.0 mm from DEJ
Sometime bending is required, but use the tool given
Pin Types:
RISK:
Burs
The GREATER the number of cutting blades on a bur, the LESS efficient but a SMOOTHER surface (polish)
Chisels vs hatchets
Both are mainly used to cut enamel
Gingival margin trimmer = bevel class II gingival margins
What does this mean on an instrument: 10-85-8-14
what is the nib?
working end of a non-cutting instrument (condenser, burnisher)
What is the distinction between a base, liner and cement?
The only distinction between a base, cement and liner is by application thickness (thickness of remaining dentin).
Base 1-2 mm (Function is to replace lost dentin, thickness required for thermal insulation)
Cement 15-25 μm
Liner 5 μm (Function is to seal dentin tubles = no pain)
base categories:
• Primary = placed on dentin
• Secondary = placed over the primary base (CaOH for resin/amalgam with direct pulp caps, or ZnP for gold).
ZOE, although a suspension liner, cannot be placed under composite due to its inhibition of resin polymerization.
Types of liners:
Both harden intra-orally by act of drying, not a chemical rxn
Which material is the only one that can be used as a cement and a permanent restoration?
GI
Occlusal reduction for gold onlay, amalgam, ceramics
Functional cusp
NOTE: Gold preps (onlays and direct gold class Vs have shard angles that are used for retention (vs. FCC). - Resistance form for gold is flat M and D walls and convex axial walls
High occlusion will produce what patient complaint?
- percussion (+)
Ferrule Effect requires what?
What is the principal cause for mold expansion?
thermal expansion (not setting)
Factors affecting expansion:
Two class III lesions nearby, which to prep first?
Prep the larger one first
Fill the smaller one first
Restore Class III canines with?
amalgam or direct gold
Amalgam is a ___ thermal conductor? Insulator?
Poor insulator (thus, requires a base ZOE or CaOH) Good conductor
Height of contour is located where?
gingival to middle 1/3 coronal
Class I cavities are found where?
both anterior and posteriors
What to do if a patient has galvanic shock?
Nothing, it will dissipate in a few days
Retention and resistance in cavity preps
Retention = converging walls Resistance = resistance mastication damage = resist fracture fo restoration = round line angles.
Amount of enamel dissolution post etch
7 - 25 microns of enamel tags (mechanical ret.)
- etch promotes wetting and adhesion
light cure in __ mm increments
First layer is 1.0 mm
Deep fillings require no more than 2.0 mm max
(40 sec can penetrate up to 2.5 mm)
- Cause polymerization shrinkage: camphor quinone (alpha-di-ketone initiator) reach with light (474 nm blue visible light) --> the ketone reacts with an amine to make free radicals.
fillers in resin cause
reduction in polymerization shrinkage
Amalgam has greater wear resistance than composite resin
Polish composite resin with
fina diamonds and aluminum oxide discs