Fillings
General Dentistry
Traditional dental restoratives (fillings) include gold, porcelain, and composite/amalgam. The strength and durability of traditional dental materials continue to make them useful for situations where restored teeth must withstand extreme forces that result from chewing, such as in the back of the mouth.
Newer dental fillings include ceramic and plastic compounds that mimic the appearance of natural teeth. These compounds, often called composite resins, are usually used on the front teeth where a natural appearance is important. They can be used on the back teeth as well depending on the location and extent of the tooth decay. Composite resins are usually more costly than the older silver amalgam fillings.
What's Right for Me?
Several factors influence the performance, durability, longevity and expense of dental restorations:
- The components used in the filling material
- The amount of tooth structure remaining
- Where and how the filling is placed
- The chewing load that the tooth will have to bear
- The length and number of visits needed to prepare and adjust the restored tooth.
The ultimate decision about what to use is best determined in consultation with your doctor. Before your treatment begins, discuss the options with your doctor. To help you prepare for this discussion it is helpful to understand the two basic types of dental fillings: direct and indirect.
- Direct fillings are fillings placed immediately into a prepared cavity in a single visit. They include dental amalgam, glass ionomers, resin ionomers, and composite (resin) fillings. The dentist prepares the tooth, places the filling, and adjusts it during one appointment.
- Indirect fillings used to take two visits, two to three weeks apart, but now that Dr. Altman is a E4D dentist, your visits can be sometimes completed on the same day. They include inlays, onlays, veneers, crowns, and bridges fabricated with gold, base metal alloys, ceramics, or composites. During the first visit, the dentist prepares the tooth and laser scans the tooth to make a digital impression. The digital impression is used by Dr. Altman to create a virtual 3D model upon which a virtual tooth is created. This information is then sent to Dr. Altman’s E4D mill where a solid block of very strong ceramic material is milled into the shape of the restoration. Next Dr. Altman will place the correct final colors and glaze and then fire the restoration in a high temperature ceramic oven. Finally the restoration will be tried in, adjusted and cemented.
Dr. Altman is your experienced and skilled Tacoma WA dentist, trained in the latest technologies to provide you with the highest level of care. Call our Tacoma dental office today to schedule your first appointment.