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MICRO DENTISTRY
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What is Air
Abrasion?
Air Abrasion
is a gentle spray of an air and powder mix that removes tooth
decay. By controlling the speed and the intensity of both the
powder and the air,we can make the procedure virtually painless.
Since a shot is not necessary in most cases, you will not have numb
or drooping lips after your dental procedure.
Air Abrasion almost never hurts - making it great for kids as well
as adults.
Tell me a little
more about air abrasion.
Since Air Abrasion is
achieved by directing a thin stream of abrasive powder at the area
of tooth decay, we remove only minimal sections of tooth - just the
decayed area. Until now, all the dentist had available was that
noisy drill. But it was so big in comparison to our beam of powder
that it removed a lot of healthy tooth structure. Air Abrasion
allows for very small cavity preparations and is part of what is
called MicroDentistry.
Why is Air Abrasion
better than the old drill?
The Air Abrasion device
that we use is state-of-the-art. Its technology eliminates the
odors, noise, vibration, micro-cracks and, in most cases, no shot
associated with the drill.
Once Air Abrasion
removes the decay, how is the cavity filled?
This is the beautiful
part - literally! we will fill that cavity with a nearly invisible,
non-mercury filling, making the entire tooth strong, long-lasting
and resistant to decay.
Can children as
well as adults benefit from Air Abrasion?
Absolutely! Air
Abrasion is perfect for children. Most cavities that are detected
early can be treated immediately without a drill and without a
needle. The tooth is then restored with natural looking materials
to strengthen and protect the remaining tooth structure. Most
children are not even aware of what the dentist is doing. Fewer
dental appointments for the young patient are usually required
because with Air Abrasion many more procedures can be completed in
a single appointment!
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The History of Air Abrasion
Air abrasion was
first introduced to dentistry in the early 1950’s. It did not gain
recognition or acceptance at that time for two reasons:
1. The equipment was
rather bulky and the delivery system was not refined.
2. The high speed
turbine was coming into prominence at the same time and was a more
familiar treatment method to the dentist.
Factors That Re-established Air Abrasion
as
a Method of Treatment
1.
The Introduction of Fluoride.
Fluoride appeared in
the mid-1950’s as an anti-carious additive. It was introduced to
the public in two ways, by being added to the public drinking water
affecting the developing tooth, and by being added to tooth paste
to provide a topical application. The effect of fluoride is most
evident on the smooth surfaces of the teeth where interproximal
decay has been greatly reduced. However, on the occlusal of the
posterior teeth where the pits and fissures are located, the decay
process occurs differently than it did prior to the introduction of
fluoride.
Prior to fluoride, as the decay progressed down the
grooves, it destroyed the surrounding tooth structure, forming a
funnel shaped lesion. This enabled the dentist to visually see the
decay process soon after it began. If the explorer would
"stick" or if the decay was evident on a radiograph, the
dentist would treat it. Until the time of treatment, the lesion was
monitored. This is how and why "watch" areas became part
of the standard treatment regimen. However, with fluoride, the
decay process does not break down the surrounding enamel as it
progresses down the grooves because the enamel is so hard. Instead
the decay moves down the grooves, penetrates the enamel and
undermines it. There is little or no visual changes on the surface
of the tooth and the explorer does not
"stick".
2.
The Change in Radiographic Film
X-ray units sold previous to the early 1960’s were 65KV
machines. The film speed used was slow and as a result the
radiation necessary to expose this slow film required the patient
to be radiated for a period of two to three seconds for the typical
periapical or bite-wing. In the 1960’s and 1970’s, radiation
exposure became an important issue to the general public. Dentists
and other health care practitioners were instructed to reduce their
diagnostic radiation. As a result, faster film was developed that
required less time for the patient to be exposed to the X-rays. The
use of faster film also reduced the clarity or definition of the
radiographs. This results in occlusal decay not being seen until
the areas are very large.
The Results of the Combination of Fluoride and Faster
Film
The
introduction of fluoride has produced an entire generation who, for
the most part, only have restorations on the occlusal of posterior
teeth. This is an advancement over the previous generations’ dental
condition. However, most of these occlusal restorations are the
typical G.V. Black "extension for prevention" amalgams.
This means waiting until areas of decay are evident on a radiograph
or until an explorer "sticks", results in a much larger
restoration than is necessary in the light of today’s
expertise.
Haven’t we all decided to treat an occlusal pit or fissure
of a molar we first saw as a "watch" area one, two,
perhaps three years earlier, only to now discover a large area of
decay not visible on the bite-wing radiograph?
Sound
familiar?
CONCLUSION: Using only radiographs and the explorer to
diagnose occlusal decay will result in unwarranted removal of good
tooth structure because caries detection is
delayed!
How Occlusal Decay Should be Diagnosed and Treated
Today
1. Caries
Detecting Solution
Other methods of detecting occlusal decay have to be
performed. The caries detection solutions that have recently been
developed will now show the pits and fissures that need treatment
long before they can be detected with the older method of
radiographs and an explorer. The diagnostic procedures adequate in
the 1950’s through the 1980’s are no longer proper treatment.
Caries detecting solutions must be applied to help
dentists diagnose decay before it progresses too far.
2.
Micro Air Abrasion
The
technique of Micro Air Abrasion allows a dentist to remove areas of
a tooth as narrow as 1/50th of an inch. Once the air abrasion
technique is mastered, these pits and fissures can be treated much
earlier than before, resulting in a minimal amount of tooth
structure being removed. This can be accomplished about 90% of the
time without the use of a local anesthetic, without the sound so
many patients object to, and without the vibration of a rotary
instrument. When minimal tooth structure is removed, bonded
composite resins can be placed which restore the tooth to 90-95% of
its original strength and 100% of its original appearance. Patients
are enthusiastic when they realize decay removal can be
accomplished as a pleasant experience long before complications
occur.
A
Simple Test To Perform
Collect a number of extracted teeth. Determine which teeth
appear to have "watch areas" and which have no visible
decay on the occlusal surface. Separate them into two groups and
take radiographs of each tooth. Discard any teeth on which you are
able to see occlusal decay. Mark the remaining teeth so as to be
able to identify the corresponding radiographs. Next, apply caries
detecting solution to the occlusal surfaces of all the teeth. After
10 to 15 seconds wash off the excess solution. (I suggest using a
green color solution rather than red because of its higher
visibility.) The teeth you determined had "watch" areas
will retain the stain. You will also discover that 75-85% of the
teeth you determined had no decay, will show pits and fissures that
are stained by the caries detecting solution. Remove the teeth that
did not retain any stain from the test. Now you will have a
collection of teeth that will exhibit stain in occlusal pits and
fissures which can be checked with the radiographs, and prove that
the radiographs show no enamel penetration of decay into the
dentin.
Using your high-speed hand-piece, remove the stain from
these grooves. When all the stain is gone, re-stain the teeth. (The
solution does not fully penetrate the whole of the decayed area at
one time.) Keep removing the stained tooth structure and re-stain
until the tooth no longer retains the stain. It will help to use
some form of magnification because the tortuous path carious
lesions can take can be difficult to follow.
You
will find virtually 100% of your "watch" areas and 85% of
those in the group you felt had no decay (but retained stain in the
pits and fissures) will have caries that extend into the dentin.
Serially section the teeth to exactly check the dentinal
penetration. Now check the radiographs. WOW! Was the width
of the preparation you made in these teeth wider than 1mm? If the
tooth had been diagnosed earlier with caries detection solution and
treated with air abrasion, the preparations would have been only
1mm wide. If these were your teeth, or those of your family, how
would you want them treated?
THE EARLY DETECTION AND TREATMENT OF OCCLUSAL DECAY IS
ESSENTIAL. HOWEVER, YOU MUST USE CARIES DETECTION SOLUTION AND
MICRO AIR ABRASION TO ACCOMPLISH THIS!
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