New Advances in Caries Removal Dr Wael Al-Omari BDS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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New Advances in Caries Removal Dr Wael Al-Omari BDS

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New Advances in Caries Removal Dr Wael Al-Omari BDS, MDentSci, PhD Caries Removal Drawbacks of Conventional Methods: Contamination and cross-infection The need for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Advances in Caries Removal Dr Wael Al-Omari BDS


1
New Advances in Caries Removal
  • Dr Wael Al-Omari
  • BDS, MDentSci, PhD

2
Caries Removal
  • Drawbacks of Conventional Methods
  • Contamination and cross-infection
  • The need for presterilisation cleaning.
  • 1-Manual cleaning of burs
  • 2-Washer disinfection.
  • 3-Ulrasonic cleaners with enzymatic
    detergents
  • Removal of infected and unaffected tissues.
  • - Is total caries removal necessary?
  • Noise, vibration and discomfort experienced with
    burs.

3
Rational behind New Developments
  • Removal of only infected dentin
  • Reduce patients anxiety
  • Provide favorable surface features for bonding
  • Reduce contamination and cross-infection
  • Reduce the need for anesthesia
  • Easier recognition between infected and
    uninfected dentin
  • Provide equal or superior efficiency compared to
    conventional methods
  • Reduce cost.

4
New Developments in Caries Removal
  • Lasers
  • Air Abrasion (Kinetic Cavity Preparation)
  • Polymer Burs
  • Micropreparation Burs.
  • Photoactivated Disinfection
  • Carisolv Gel
  • Atraumatic Restorative Treatment.
  • Caries-Detector Dyes

5
Lasers
  • Early Lasers (Caron dioxide, ruby and NdYAG)
  • 1- Inefficient cutting
  • 2- Excessive heat generation
  • 3- More efficient for soft tissue surgery.

6
NdYAG laser ablated dentin showing craters and
cracks and heat induced band (Lin et al, 2001)
7
Erbium Lasers
  • Erbium yttrium aluminum garnet (ErYAG, 2.94 µm
    wavelength)
  • Erbium chromium yttrium scandium gallium garnet
    (Er,ChYSGG, 2.78 µm wavelength)

8
Mechanism of ablation by erbium lasers
  • Thermomechanical Ablation
  • - High absorption coefficient in water and
    high
  • affinity for hydroxyapatite.
  • - Absorbed heat cause microexplosions and
  • microfragmentataion of target issue.
  • - Irradiated surface demonstrate
  • microirregularities, absence of smear
    layer,
  • open tubules, absence of extensive thermal
  • effects.

9
Cavity prepared with erbium laser
10
Bur cut versus Er,chYSGG laser cut dentin
(Ekworapoj et al, 2007)
11
Advantages of erbium lasers
  • No thermal effect on target tissues and pulp.
  • Noiseless, no vibrations.
  • No harmful effect on the pulp.
  • Distinguishing between infected and uninfected
    dentine might be possible.
  • Various clinical applications periodontics,
    endodontics, operative dentistry.

12
Disadvantages of erbium lasers
  • Cost
  • Erbium laser preparations must be followed by
    acid etching for reliable bonding to resin
    composite
  • May weaken the irradiated surface
  • (lower microhardness)
  • Defocusing effect due to water spray
  • Tissues can be only removed when it is visible to
    operators line of sight.
  • Lack of tactile sensation
  • Large devices

13
Biolase ezlase 940
Waterlase MD
14
Future Development
  • New more efficient generations of erbium lasers.
  • Lasers with femtosecond pulse duration (pulse
    duration 10-15 s)

15
Air Abrasion (Kinetic Cavity Preparation)
  • This technique uses a pressurized stream of small
    aluminum oxide particles to abrade carious
    lesion.
  • Typical Air Abrasion system
  • - Particle diameter 27-50 µm.
  • - Powder flow rate 0.7-4.2 g/min
  • - Air pressure 40-160 psi
  • - Operating distance from tooth 0.5-2 mm

16
Air abrasion Handpiece
Air Abrasion Unit
17
Clinical Indications
  • Removal of superficial enamel defects
  • For detection pit and fissure caries by removal
    of organic debris.
  • Removal of enamel surface stains.
  • Removal of localized minimal carious lesion
  • Surface preparation of abfractions and abrasions
    to brake the glaze of the surface for better
    bonding.
  • Removal of existing restorations.
  • The need for anesthesia may be avoided because of
    the cooling effect of the high pressure air

18
Cavity prepared using air abrasion technique
19
Advantages of Air Abrasion
  • Less painful than bur preparation due to less
    noise and vibration.
  • More conservative than bur for minimal fissure
    and pit caries.
  • Roughened surfaces may favor better
    bonding.However air abrasion is not a substitute
    for acid etching

20
Limitations of Air Abrasion
  • There is little tactile sensation
  • Unable to remove gross caries.
  • Removes normal and relatively hard dentin.
  • Remove exposed cementum and root dentin.
  • Splattering f powder-risk of ingestion.
  • Unable to prepare well-defined cavity margins.
  • Does not obviate the need for acid etching.
  • May lacerate soft tissues
  • Removal of large amalgam causes release of
    mercury
  • Mandatory need for rubber dam, high velocity
    evacuation and protective eyewear

21
Future Developments in Air Abrasion
  • Less abrasive powders
  • - Softer particles may be more
  • effective in selective removal of
  • carious dentine

22
Polymer Bur
  • Described by Boston (2000).
  • Made of a softer polyamide/imide polymer
    material.
  • Remove infected dentine only
  • Manufacturer SmartPrep (SS White, USA)
  • Harder than carious dentine and softer than
    healthy dentine
  • Designed for single use on slow-handpiece
  • Remove caries from central of lesion to periphery
  • Less effective than carbide bur in caries removal
    (Dammaschke et al, 2006)

23
Polymer burs
SmartPrep before (1a) and after (1b) use
(Dammaschke et al, 2006)
24
Micropreparation Burs
  • Fissurotomy Burs (SS White,USA) allow exploration
    of the fissures with minimal removal of enamel.
  • It is 1.5-2.5 mm in length and tapers to fine
    carbide tip.
  • Other burs such as Brassler 889M-007 bur and
    Microdiamond 838M-007 burs are used for minimal
    preparation.
  • Microinstruments (Micropreparation set) requires
    low contact pressure (lt 2N)

25
Fissurotomy Bur
26
Conventional bur versus
fissurotomy bur
27
Photoactivated Disinfection
  • The system use disinfectant solution applied to
    deep caries, allowed to penetrate softened dentin
    for 60 s, and then photoactivated with
    low-powered diode laser for 1 min.
  • Dilute toluidine blue binds to bacteria. Red
    light activation release oxygen that kills the
    cells

28
  • Healthy tissues are not damaged by the laser
  • Toluidine blue is safe at the used dilution
  • Toludine blue and laser acts together
    effectively.

29
Photo-Activated Disinfection (PAD)
30
Carisolv Gel
  • Carisolv s a chemomechanical method for caries
    removal.
  • It is a mixture of amino acids and 05 sodium
    bicarbonate
  • The resultant high-pH chloramines reacts with
    denatured collagen in carious dentin
  • Softened dentin is removed with special hand
    instruments

31
Special hand instruments used with Carisolv Gel
32
Clinical Indications For Carisolv Gel
  • Removal of root and coronal caries where access
    is easily obtained
  • Due to selective removal of carious dentine, the
    need foe anesthesia is reduced , thus the
    technique is indicated in children, dental-phobic
    patients and special needs patients

33
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34
Advantages of Carisolve Gel
  • Selective removal of carious dentine.
  • The reduced need for anesthesia
  • Does not affect the bonding to composite.
  • Removes smear layer
  • Does not cause adverse effect on the pulp.

35
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36
Disadvantages of Carisolv Gel
  • Technique requires longer time than conventional
    method.
  • May be inefficient for removing caries at
    enamel-dentin junction.
  • Caries under overhanging enamel may go unnoticed.
  • Large lesions needs to be accessed using rotary
    bur.

37
?Atraumatic Restorative Treatment (ART
  • Atraumatic Restorative Treatment is a procedure
    based on removing carious tooth tissue sing hand
    instruments alone and restoring the cavity with
    an adhesive restorative material namely glass
    ionomer

38
Hand instruments used in ART
39
Reasons for using hand instruments in ART
  • Makes restorative procedure accessible to all
    population.
  • Minimal cavity preparation
  • Low cost
  • Reduce need for anesthesia
  • Simplified infection control due to easy cleaning
    and sterilization

40
Reason for using glass-ionomer in ART
  • Glass ionomer sticks chemically to enamel and
    dentin
  • Fluoride release
  • Compatible to oral and hard dental tissues

41
Advantages of ART
  • Benefit the less-industrialized and deprived
    communities
  • Minimal invasion preparations
  • Friendly procedure for children, fearful adults,
    physically or mentally handicapped, people living
    in nursing homes and the home-bound elderly

42
Disadvantages of ART
  • Restorations tend to fail and wear.
  • Incomplete removal of bacteria
  • Wear and failure means that patients require
    frequent review by trained personnel
  • Difficult o remove caries in inaccessible
    lesions.

43
Caries Detection Dyes
  • Dyes such as 1.0 acid red in propylene glycol.
  • They stain infected dentine and organic matrix of
    demineralised of carious dentin that should not
    be removed.
  • They stain dentin naturally with low minerals
    such as circumpulpal dentin and enamel-dentin
    junction
  • Result in overpreparations.
  • Not useful in detecting pt and fissure caries
    because they stain food debris and other organic
    materials in the fissure
  • They are not recommended

44
Caries detecting dyes stains demineralised matrix
of carious dentin that should not be removed
45
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