Reaction of the human dental pulp to silver amalgam restorations: The modifying effect of treatment with calcium hydroxide

Authors

  • Bengt Möuller Departments of Oral Histopathology and Pedodontics, University of Lund, School of Dentistry, Malmö, Sweden

Keywords:

Dental pulp, dental restoration, permanent, dental amalgam, calcium hydroxide

Abstract

Abstract

Cavities were prepared in 43 bicuspid teeth using two general categories of cavity depth. In the |DAdeep|DA cavities the bottom was placed in the inner third of the dentin. In the |DAintermediate depth|DA cavities the bottom was positioned in the middle third of the dentin. The bottom of the cavities was either rubbed with calcium hydroxide, covered with calcium hydroxide, or left unlined before filling according to the wet amalgam technique. The teeth were extracted after 1 week and examined histologically. All cases, except 2 with deep and 1 with intermediate depth rubbed cavities, showed local vascular dilatation in the pulp underneath the cavity. In addition, all teeth with deep unlined cavities showed inflammatory cells as did 1 with an intermediate depth unlined cavity. There were fewer displaced odontoblast nuclei in the dentin in the calcium hydroxide-treated groups. The milder reactions in the rubbed or covered groups are probably due to the restrictive effect by calcium hydroxide on penetration of amalgam components. In the teeth with deep cavities there were only minor differences between the ones which had been rubbed and those which had been covered with calcium hydroxide.

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Published

1975-01-01