Dental TipsDentistry |1 min read

Composite Occlusal Contacts

It’s important to know the wear and resistance of composite in areas of direct occlusal contact.

One piece of good news is that very few composite restorations are replaced because of excessive wear. The majority of restorations succumb to marginal breakdown and leakage, secondary caries or other forms of bond failure. Now, the bad news is that bond failure and bond degradation is accelerated under extreme occlusal load. With all of this in mind it makes sense to manage excessive forces and material selection to increase longevity of our restorations.

There are a number of considerations when managing composite:

• Chose a material with low shrinkage stress so the restoration begins with minimal strain on the bonded interface.
• Chose a material with good wear resistance so that wear does not introduce excursive interferences over time increasing the load on the bonded interface.
• Chose a composite with low surface roughness to reduce the wear of the opposing dentition and minimize production of excursive interferences over time.
• Place the restoration under isolation and manage the creation of the hybrid zone carefully to maximize initial bond strength.

almandari-pre-op

nitial-prep-web

Venus Diamond Opaque Chromatic Shades as a base
Venus Diamond Opaque Chromatic Shades as a base
Venus Diamond Occlusals on both molars
Venus Diamond Occlusals on both molars

Material Recommendations:

ivoclartetric-evoceram-bulk-fill

The other side of the equation is managing the force being applied to the restoration:

• Assess patients to identify a high risk from occlusal force.
• Evaluate the four occlusal positions ( End to end, ICP, Excursives, Retruded from ICP) for evidence of attrition.
• Alter the occlusal relationships to minimize force application.
• Alter the occlusal contacts to distribute force.

Tetric Evoceram Bulk Fill
Tetric Evoceram Bulk Fill
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