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Summer 2000: Volume
24, Number 4 |
|
| Clinical
Articles |
|
| Composite crown-form crowns
for severely decayed primary molars: a technique for restoring
function and esthetics |
|
Current developments in esthetic
dentistry center around new techniques and materials that improve
the ability of the clinician to provide esthetic services. This
article describes a step-by-step method of placing composite crown-form
crowns on severely decayed primary mandibular molars. The described
technique allows for restoring, as close as possible, form and
function lost to caries in an esthetic mode in cases of severely
decayed primary molars that would have required stainless steel
crowns had they been treated traditionally. Disadvantages of this
treatment mode are that dryness may not be prevented in the proximal
margins, especially where subgingival carious involvement is encountered
and the margin areas may be contaminated with gingival fluid or
blood. Although no long-term follow-up has been reported for the
technique, when strong opposition by the parent or child to the
stainless steel crown is encountered, and a desire for esthetic
restoration is strongly expressed, the composite crown-form crowns
may be considered as an alternative. |
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| Full Text | |
| © 2007 The Journal of Clinical Pediatric Dentistry |