Cement mixture useful as permanent or temporary dental filling or fixing materialA cement mixture (I) for dental purposes consists of: (A) inorganic reactive fillers; (B) micro-encapsulated liquid and/or micro-encapsulated solutions of reactive components and optionally; (C) dry polycarboxylic acid...
The main clinical features of CCD include persistently open skull sutures with bulging calvaria, hypoplasia, or aplasia of the clavicles permitting abnormal facility in opposing the shoulders, wide pubic symphysis, short middle phalanx of the fifth fingers, dental anomalies, and often vertebral malforma...
1. Introduction to “percutaneous device dilemma” in dental and other permanent implants Cellular attachment to extracellular matrices is a requisite for tissue function and contributed to the rise of multicellular life [1]. Cells without a matrix would exist as amorphous masses without a physical ...
unhappy. The 2 front teeth look too bulky and do not resemble the temporary. It also feels to tight on one tooth which I told the dentist What do I do now? I want this bridge off. It took so long for the permanent to be made in the first place. So unhappy with the outcome.The...
fusion of the cementum and bone at one or more locations/teeth do not move with the continuing vertical growth of the alveolar arch. • Results in the tooth being in infra- occlusion or “submerged” relative to the occlusal plane. ...
In fractures without pulpal involvement, dentin was covered by a hard-setting calcium hydroxide cement (Dycal), marginal enamel acid-etched (phosphoric acid gel), then covered with a temporary crown and bridge material. In the case of pulp exposure, pulp capping or partial pulpotomy was ...
The teeth were then restored with glass ionomer cement. Clinical and electric pulp tests were performed after 1 and 8 weeks. The teeth were radiographed and extracted at 8 weeks. Histologic sections were prepared and analyzed for pulp inflammation and dentinal bridge formation. Data were analyzed ...
Within one patient, only enamel opacities, without loss of hard dental tissue, can be present on one molar, while in another molar, large parts of the enamel are already broken down [45]. The risk for the onset of MIH lesions on upper incisors is higher when more FPMs are affected [...
Before the operation, a medical/dental history and chief complaint were recorded as part of the clinical assessment. Afterward, the periodontal tissues, tooth mobility, and possibility for restoration were evaluated. In addition, the pulp response was assessed using the Endo Ice cold sensibility test...
and resin adhesive were assumed to have Young’s modulus of 19.70 GPa, 4.92 GPa, and 1 GPa and a Poisson’s ratio of 0.32, 0.27, and 0.24, respectively [38]. According to the ISO requirements for luting cement, the thickness of the adhesive system was standardized at 25 microns [39]....