Pins are not need it in composite restorations because they have adhesive properties, and un need to bend the pins in order to gain retention. I woldn't use flow composite in all the restauration, just in the first layer of resin, maybe the 2 first layers.
@@dwayneevans683 pins are used to cover the lack of adhesivity of amalgam, because when u are ussing composite or any ressin they already have adhesive properties. If u are gonna use flow composite just use it in the first 2 layers of the restoration because in the next steps u need to put a denser material to shape the internal anatomy of the restoration to avoid oclusal forces to break te tooth, with flow u cant shape anithing because is really liquid, it is not the way to go.
@@josemanueltorresrubio406 Aldo it has great adhesive properties and very hard to remove because of this i would still use the pins is half of the tooth is already gone, every case is different, i seen very bad ones and to be on the safe side for those particular cases pins are the way to go, do not need pins if at least most of the walls of the tooth are there, if there is too much missing wall from bottom to top pins can give you that extra hold so the filling material won't slide off over time after long use and chewing.
I believe like in medical advances technology. In the future there will be dental procedures advances maybe one day a tooth transplant now I'm going out on a limb with this particular claim. However you get the message better ways to do procedures that we haven't discovered yet. It's exciting. 😊😊
This claims are quite old, tech people saying they make tooth regrow via stem cells and other ways but this hasn't been proven to be a real thing, also tooth Implants exists they just don't use real tooth from other people, they use ceramic, porcelain and metal tooth then they screw them in with screws in the bone.
The light makes the filling material dried rapidly rather than amalgam which can take up to 3 hours before drying completely, 24 hours before full strength and polishing, some dentists prefer to wait 2 days before polishing for amalgam, composite fillings allows polishing and finishing right away after drying with the curing light just like magic.
what is it he says he is going to feel at 1:52 so he doesn't hit the pulp or PDL? Sounds like he is saying he will feel the "path of drow"
Pins are not need it in composite restorations because they have adhesive properties, and un need to bend the pins in order to gain retention. I woldn't use flow composite in all the restauration, just in the first layer of resin, maybe the 2 first layers.
why not flow, is it to weak
@@dwayneevans683 pins are used to cover the lack of adhesivity of amalgam, because when u are ussing composite or any ressin they already have adhesive properties. If u are gonna use flow composite just use it in the first 2 layers of the restoration because in the next steps u need to put a denser material to shape the internal anatomy of the restoration to avoid oclusal forces to break te tooth, with flow u cant shape anithing because is really liquid, it is not the way to go.
He meant the posts in the video
@@josemanueltorresrubio406 Aldo it has great adhesive properties and very hard to remove because of this i would still use the pins is half of the tooth is already gone, every case is different, i seen very bad ones and to be on the safe side for those particular cases pins are the way to go, do not need pins if at least most of the walls of the tooth are there, if there is too much missing wall from bottom to top pins can give you that extra hold so the filling material won't slide off over time after long use and chewing.
I believe like in medical advances technology. In the future there will be dental procedures advances maybe one day a tooth transplant now I'm going out on a limb with this particular claim. However you get the message better ways to do procedures that we haven't discovered yet. It's exciting. 😊😊
This claims are quite old, tech people saying they make tooth regrow via stem cells and other ways but this hasn't been proven to be a real thing, also tooth Implants exists they just don't use real tooth from other people, they use ceramic, porcelain and metal tooth then they screw them in with screws in the bone.
LOL
What is the blue light for?
For curing of the composite
It's light curing type
Light-polymerization
The light makes the filling material dried rapidly rather than amalgam which can take up to 3 hours before drying completely, 24 hours before full strength and polishing, some dentists prefer to wait 2 days before polishing for amalgam, composite fillings allows polishing and finishing right away after drying with the curing light just like magic.
Well done