Displaying 25–36 of 56 Results
A patient came to our office, complaining about chewing and thermic discomfort in the upper right jaw. After clinical and radiographic examination, carious lesions on elements 1.7, 1.6, 1.5 and 1.4 have been detected.
Patient with deep carious lesion on tooth d35(OD). Endodontic treatment was performed prior to restoration. Slickband was used to do margin elevation on distal aspect of the tooth.
The patient was sent to me by a colleague knowing that I deal with surgical extrusion to avoid the extraction of the extremely compromised tooth 25.
Interproximal space management is a very important issue in clear aligners therapy. This case presented crowding in upper and lower arches. It was treated with clear aligner therapy through a digital planification. The interproximal reduction (IPR) was carefully planned.
A healthy ASA II 72-year-old female presented for restorative replacement of old composite restorations on #7MP and DP as well as #8MP. The restorations were well aged and exhibited gross marginal leakage, and interestingly abutted against aged feldspathic porcelain venee
Following a diagnosis of carious lesions on the distal walls of teeth 14 and 15, the defects were resolved by conservative therapy. Using the new Strata-G ™ orange and blue separator rings, it is possible to deal with multiple restorations on the same tooth by stacking the two rings.
The presence of carious lesions on the distal walls of teeth 24 and 25 required conservative intervention in order to solve the patient’s problem.
Optimizing the shape and emergency profile of an interproximal wall is the most delicate phase of the entire conservative workflow for Class II lesions. In this case, the lesion on the mesial wall of tooth 16 was treated.
In this article, Dr. Bis shows you how to eliminate those annoying food traps that patients complain about in a very fast and efficient way. She also shares with you her step-by-step process that helps you determine and analyze areas that your patient wasn’t even aware of.
Interproximal caries is the most common type of dental pathology and therefore interproximal fillings in the posterior area are the most common restorative procedures. Restoring adequate cervical contour an
The case presents the need to seal the cervical margin which is in a very deep position, even if it can be isolated with a dam, and to recreate an adequate emergence profile.