yea very nice restoration but - 1 im sure there will be air bubbles in the restoration since the composite was pretty much just placed there and not properly squeezed and compressed to adhere to all the surfaces, its time consuming for a molar tooth which first task is to withstand the occlusal load not aesthetics, this has been done extraorally without any relation to the corresponding arch that occludes to the tooth surface, its a good looking restoration sadly not functional and unrealistic
@@y-jk1674 Watching this for the first time. Couldn't agree more. Today I'm finishing 36 after endo treatment and was looking for some tips in how to model the cusps, as it is a very young patient. This really looks beautiful but In my practice there is no time for this level, but certainly since functionality comes first, this would fail on mentioned tooth after some time for sure. Nevertheless nice skills. I don't enjoy endo and restorative dentistry anymore 🙃
1. Need to respect pre-op wear or be prepared to adjust the opposing 2. Put the fissures in the right place 3. Make sure the fissures are positioned apically enough. All adjustments will then be minimal on cusp slopes if you have made any too steep.
This is the most beautiful restoration I have ever watched in my life. Is there room for error in air pockets or gaps which have not fully bonded together?
Hi, I have 4 composite filling teeth (molar). When this filling is done there my age 14. And now 19. Doctor said that composite filling need to restore after 8 year. And when your teeth reached 3 layer then we can not restore by composite filling. Then need to extract it. I am very worried that how many years I can use my teeth . Is there any composite filling that have lasting very much? Is there any solution except RCT? Please suggest me.
There is no rule on how many years a composite restoration may last... may be 5, 8. or even 15 yrs. Failure of restoration does not always warrant a RCT nor extraction. It is best to always check it out with a Dr to diagnose secondary caries before it reaches the pulp (level 3)
I personally don't like the idea to sacrifice resin integrity for anatomy. Grooves must be less dense than the other part which is vulnerable to secondary caries. I think stamp technique is much more useful.
I was getting treatment at a university dental clinic. I stated, no pain and no amalgam. The students were all set up for amalgam. I asked them what the plan was and they stated removing the old amalgam, and decay then refilling with amalgam. I stated no amalgam. The doctor was listening and stated amalgam will not pose any problems. It is perfectly safe. I asked what the alternative was. The students stated composite. We argued about the efficacy and the students and staff would not back down. I was paying cash for all treatment. I thought the patient has rights? They filled the tooth with amalgam. Next time, that will not happen, or I will file a lawsuit.
I appreciate comment! I’m a dentist. In short, I prefer white composite resin restorations hands down (for most common cases). Coming from placing more “resin composite restorations” (white fillings) vs. Silver Amalgam Fillings, they both have their places. The university staff/students are correct that Amalgams placed in a matter to properly mix and harden have been shown to be safe for use in the past hundred years, BUT if you seen silver fillings placed that are involving cavity sizes or spaces that have to be filled, just like the video above, the tooth is going to have a higher risk of developing enamel fracturing the larger the filling needs to fill the space. A larger filling width More than ⅓ the distance of the from the cheek to tongue distance, will make the tooth weaker. Strength of a tooth is determined by how much natural tooth there is. White fillings on the other have their drawbacks too. White fillings on average last 5-7 years and then become susceptible to staining, but more so leakage of stains, bacteria, in the weakest link of the white filling: the “dental adhesive”. Between the tooth and filling. In summary: silver fillings do last a heck longer than white fillings due to their metallic “malleable” characteristic, but you generally have to take much more tooth out to make sure the silver filling doesn’t slide out from the tooth. Silver fillings are great for patients who grind their teeth, can get cavities easier, or have cavities near the gum line under crowns. White fillings only need enough space for where the cavity is and for the clinician to properly place it. But the bond/glue that is used isn’t immortal (as is anything in life..). But can be replaced and still kept pretty small to keep the tooth strong depending on where the cavities are. If I had to have fillings (I have both silver and white) white composite resin fillings are what I would get since they are conservative in size, tooth colored, easier to detect for cavities around the filling on xrays, and don’t weaken the tooth causing fractures in people who clench/grind their teeth or chew on nuts/ice regularly. And of course, you have your patient rights. Don’t feel like you’re obligated to say yes to everything you are offered, but be sure to explore ask and know what is important to you. My school wanted to inform the public that silver fillings are safe (true) but in some cases they can be damaging long term to teeth the larger they are causing cracking/fracturing. But hey, if you have the privilege of having options and you’re paying cash, I’d go to a private dental office. -Cheers!
@@extremerecluse2095 clearly you're not paying enough for filling. Just go to a good private experience dentist. And yes, dentist does spend an hour or more working on single tooth when they're paid fairly.
yea very nice restoration but - 1 im sure there will be air bubbles in the restoration since the composite was pretty much just placed there and not properly squeezed and compressed to adhere to all the surfaces, its time consuming for a molar tooth which first task is to withstand the occlusal load not aesthetics, this has been done extraorally without any relation to the corresponding arch that occludes to the tooth surface, its a good looking restoration sadly not functional and unrealistic
Exactly what I was thinking!
@@y-jk1674 Watching this for the first time. Couldn't agree more. Today I'm finishing 36 after endo treatment and was looking for some tips in how to model the cusps, as it is a very young patient. This really looks beautiful but In my practice there is no time for this level, but certainly since functionality comes first, this would fail on mentioned tooth after some time for sure. Nevertheless nice skills. I don't enjoy endo and restorative dentistry anymore 🙃
yeah i agreeee this Is not 100% fuctional, i raccomand to learn the AFG
But how do you avoid high spots. Even if I restore a good anatomy it gets almost flat after occlusal adjustment.
Its such a relief to see this has 20 likes. I'm always running in to this problem
1. Need to respect pre-op wear or be prepared to adjust the opposing
2. Put the fissures in the right place
3. Make sure the fissures are positioned apically enough.
All adjustments will then be minimal on cusp slopes if you have made any too steep.
I watch this video many times it's so beautiful 🤩😊
Artistic dentistry... Very talented. My guy slices cold cuts on the weekend.
que bellezaaa esa reconstrucción de la cara oclusal,me encanta
This is the most beautiful restoration I have ever watched in my life. Is there room for error in air pockets or gaps which have not fully bonded together?
Thank you so much for this catchy video!! I love it so much ❤
Who's about to do restorations soon? .. I'm so nervous. I'm gonna be doing it tomorrow😬
Any updates?
I have final of it tmr 🤲🏻
Tell me how it was?
I’m gonna do it tomorrow 😭
Mee too , gonna treat my first patient the next week ❤❤
@@Tmtmntinmd how was it
Thaaanks ... can u write down every material has been used ??
Nice work 👍
Beautiful!!!
Amazing 👏
Im a year 4 dental student. Came here for a the esthetics.
Now you graduate 👩🎓 right 😂 congratulation 🎉
beautiful ^^ thanks
what is the brown stain that was used at the end of the video to copy the natural fissure apearance?
Great video! Beautiful .
Any tip for using composite brush?
Use soft brush with 0.01 mm thickness
hello dr,whats the name of the instrument that used to place the composite, is it probe?
Why no etch for this?
It's a class two, since it has a box ;)
Thank you :) our fault
No problem. Great videos, keep them going!
I love it 🤩
Amazing work
الفشاة المستعمله تحوي البوند ام لا
what is the material name while creating fissure?
I can do this but have to grind all my amazing anatomy when the bite is always too high 😢
بلا زحمه ممكن اعرف الماده الي ضفتوهه ع مود اللمعه شنو هل هي bond أم لا ؟
فيه بعض المقاطع اشوف فيها يستعملون مادة كذا وطلع اسمها modelling liquid بس ماادري اذا فعلاً نفسها او لا
Type of composite and instrument name please
Hi,
I have 4 composite filling teeth (molar). When this filling is done there my age 14. And now 19. Doctor said that composite filling need to restore after 8 year. And when your teeth reached 3 layer then we can not restore by composite filling. Then need to extract it. I am very worried that how many years I can use my teeth .
Is there any composite filling that have lasting very much?
Is there any solution except RCT?
Please suggest me.
There is no rule on how many years a composite restoration may last... may be 5, 8. or even 15 yrs. Failure of restoration does not always warrant a RCT nor extraction. It is best to always check it out with a Dr to diagnose secondary caries before it reaches the pulp (level 3)
whats the name of this song?
Great job
I so much love this ❤
But please you can make it easier if you can write all materials needed 🙏
Ok! Thank you!
helal olsun bee güzel yaptı
Excellent 😍
i like it
Juste waw
الموسيقى ياريت مافيش في الفيديو
شكرا على الفيديو
what is the name of the brownish liqued material used at the end
Yes. How is name of this product?
tint
Stain
Who did that?
بالمحصلة الشغل راىع
Are you aplying some kind of varnish to give a gloss finishing before the characterizing phase?
It’s just bond
@@obe1276 Mmm, bond will make it yellowish and will break down easily.
@@hgdm89 primer
@@hgdm89 which country you work in and where did you qualify
@@obe1276 Primer? I'm not talking about the adhesion part. I was asking about the finishing material prior to the final characterization phase.
بس وين التبطين
والله اني شاطر في شغل الاسنان كنت في الامتحان اول واحد يخلص و كنت احصل افضل علامه.
لو سمحت شنو اسم اخر مادة استخدموها بالفيديو يكون لونها بني غامق بعد الشغل
@@zozo0od623 stain
I personally don't like the idea to sacrifice resin integrity for anatomy. Grooves must be less dense than the other part which is vulnerable to secondary caries. I think stamp technique is much more useful.
Yeah but you can use it only if the caries isnt with cavitation or when there hadnt been done another filling with poor anatomy- so almost never😂
💣💣💣💣
Incorrect anatomy, mibuccal cusp triangular ridge should be the longest.
Nice 😅😂😂
This is a vary tedious process. A doctor does not want to spend one hour filling a tooth with composite when they can do it in 3 minutes with amalgam.
It's their job -_-
I was getting treatment at a university dental clinic. I stated, no pain and no amalgam. The students were all set up for amalgam. I asked them what the plan was and they stated removing the old amalgam, and decay then refilling with amalgam. I stated no amalgam. The doctor was listening and stated amalgam will not pose any problems. It is perfectly safe. I asked what the alternative was. The students stated composite. We argued about the efficacy and the students and staff would not back down. I was paying cash for all treatment. I thought the patient has rights? They filled the tooth with amalgam. Next time, that will not happen, or I will file a lawsuit.
I appreciate comment! I’m a dentist. In short, I prefer white composite resin restorations hands down (for most common cases).
Coming from placing more “resin composite restorations” (white fillings) vs. Silver Amalgam Fillings, they both have their places. The university staff/students are correct that Amalgams placed in a matter to properly mix and harden have been shown to be safe for use in the past hundred years, BUT if you seen silver fillings placed that are involving cavity sizes or spaces that have to be filled, just like the video above, the tooth is going to have a higher risk of developing enamel fracturing the larger the filling needs to fill the space. A larger filling width More than ⅓ the distance of the from the cheek to tongue distance, will make the tooth weaker. Strength of a tooth is determined by how much natural tooth there is. White fillings on the other have their drawbacks too. White fillings on average last 5-7 years and then become susceptible to staining, but more so leakage of stains, bacteria, in the weakest link of the white filling: the “dental adhesive”. Between the tooth and filling. In summary: silver fillings do last a heck longer than white fillings due to their metallic “malleable” characteristic, but you generally have to take much more tooth out to make sure the silver filling doesn’t slide out from the tooth. Silver fillings are great for patients who grind their teeth, can get cavities easier, or have cavities near the gum line under crowns. White fillings only need enough space for where the cavity is and for the clinician to properly place it. But the bond/glue that is used isn’t immortal (as is anything in life..). But can be replaced and still kept pretty small to keep the tooth strong depending on where the cavities are.
If I had to have fillings (I have both silver and white) white composite resin fillings are what I would get since they are conservative in size, tooth colored, easier to detect for cavities around the filling on xrays, and don’t weaken the tooth causing fractures in people who clench/grind their teeth or chew on nuts/ice regularly.
And of course, you have your patient rights. Don’t feel like you’re obligated to say yes to everything you are offered, but be sure to explore ask and know what is important to you.
My school wanted to inform the public that silver fillings are safe (true) but in some cases they can be damaging long term to teeth the larger they are causing cracking/fracturing. But hey, if you have the privilege of having options and you’re paying cash, I’d go to a private dental office.
-Cheers!
@@extremerecluse2095 clearly you're not paying enough for filling. Just go to a good private experience dentist. And yes, dentist does spend an hour or more working on single tooth when they're paid fairly.
Not professional
can you tell us the music used pls?