Affiliation:
1. Department of Conservative Dentistry, United Medical and Dental School, Guy's Hospital, London Bridge, London SE1 9RT, England
2. Joint Microbiological Research Unit, King's College School of Medicine and Dentistry, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RW, England
Abstract
Caries at the margins of restorations is difficult to diagnose, and the relevance of staining and ditching around tooth-colored fillings is unclear. This clinical study questions the relevance of marginal color change and marginal ditching to the level of infection of the dentin beneath the margins of tooth-colored restorations. Clinically visible sites (197) on the tooth/restoration margin were selected in 113 teeth. The filling margin and the enamel adjacent to each site were noted as stained or stain-free, and sites were graded as intact, having a narrow ditch, or having a wide ditch. Thirty sites with frankly carious lesions were also included. Plaque was sampled at the toothrestoration margin and the filling removed. The enamel-dentin junction (EDJ) at each sample site was noted as hard or soft when probed, and the dentin was sampled. Samples were vortexed, diluted, and cultured for total anaerobic counts, mutans streptococci, and lactobacilli. There were more bacteria in the plaque over frankly carious cavities, and the dentin was soft and heavily infected. Only 38 out of 167 sites without frankly carious cavities had soft dentin at the EDJ. Both the plaque and dentin in these sites harbored more micro-organisms. However, none of the clinical criteria chosen would reliably predict the presence of this soft dentin. In this study, only a frankly carious lesion at the margin of the filling constituted a reliable diagnosis of secondary caries.
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