Seal, replacement or monitoring amalgam restorations with occlusal marginal defects? Results of a 10-year clinical trial
Author
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Moncada, G.
Author
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Fernández Godoy, Eduardo
Author
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Mena, K.
Author
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Martin, J.
Author
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Vildósola Grez, Patricio
Author
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Oliveira, Osmir Batista
Author
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Estay Larenas, Juan
Author
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Mjoer, I. A.
Author
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Gordan, V. V.
Admission date
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2015-12-18T12:58:34Z
Available date
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2015-12-18T12:58:34Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Dentistry 43 (2015) 1371–1378
en_US
Identifier
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doi: 10.1016/j.jdent.2015.07.012
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/135835
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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The aim of this prospective and blind clinical trial was to assess the effectiveness of sealing localized marginal defects of amalgam restoration that were initially scheduled to be replaced.
A cohort of twenty six patients with 60 amalgam restorations (n = 44Class I and n = 16Class II), that presented marginal defects deviating from ideal (Bravo) according to USPHS criteria, were assigned to either sealing or replacement groups: A: sealing n = 20, Replacement n = 20, and no treatment (n = 20). Two blind examiners evaluated the restorations at baseline (K = 0.74) and after ten years (K = 0.84) according with USPHS criteria, in four parameters: marginal adaptation (MA), secondary caries (SC), marginal staining (MS) and teeth sensitivity (TS). Multiple comparison of restorations degradation/upgrade was analyzed by Friedman test and the comparisons within groups were performed by Wilcoxon test.
After 10 years, 44 restorations were assessed (73.3%), Group A: n = 14 and Group B: n = 16; and Group C: n = 14 sealing and replacement amalgam restorations presented similar level of quality in MA (p = 0.76), SC (p = 0.25) and TS (p = 0.52), while in MS (p = 0.007) presented better performance in replacement group after 10-years.
Most of the occlusal amalgam restorations with marginal gaps showed similar long term outcomes than the restorations were sealed, replaced, or not treated over a 10-year period. Most of the restorations of the three groups were clinically acceptable, under the studied parameters. All restorations had the tendency to present downgrade/deterioration over time. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.