Composite Filling (tooth-colored)
A dental filling (also called a dental restoration) may last many years before it needs to be replaced. However, there are a number of reasons that fillings may need to be replaced. Constant stress from chewing, grinding and clenching teeth may eventually cause a filling to chip, crack, wear down, or fall out.
We use ‘composite’ if a tooth has decay or has a filling that needs to be replaced. Composite fillings are a mixture of glass or quartz filler in a resin medium that produces a tooth-colored filling. Composite fillings provide good durability and resistance to fracture in small-to-midsize restorations that need to withstand moderate chewing pressure.
Less tooth structure is removed when the dentist prepares the tooth, and this may result in a smaller filling that that of an amalgam (silver filling). Composites also are “bonded” or adhesively held in a cavity, often allowing the dentist to make a more conservative repair to the tooth.
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Before- amalgam fillings-notice the top tooth filling has a crack and the dark line around the fillings indicate breakdown, which is allowing bacteria and acids to get underneath the amalgam, which leads to recurrent decay.
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Unfortunately accidents do happen. This child hit his front tooth and broke it. By placing a composite, we were able to build the tooth back up to look like a natural tooth!
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This young boy hit his front teeth. We replaced the broken part of both teeth with composites. |
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