Nanotechnology shows potential for dental procedures Posted: 03-18-08 02:03am
Despite their best efforts, a filling may
eventually crack under the stress of
biting, chewing and teeth grinding, or
secondary decay may develop where the
filling binds to the tooth. Fully 70
percent of all dental procedures involve
replacements to existing repairs, at a
cost of $5 billion per year in the United
States alone.
Now, however, scientists at the American
Dental Association's Paffenbarger Research
Center, a joint research program at the
National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST), have shown that
nanotechnology has the potential to lessen
that toll by producing tooth restorations
that are both stronger than any
decay-fighting fillings available today,
and more effective at preventing secondary
decay. They report their findings in a
recent issue of The Journal of Dental
Research.
The researchers, new technique solves a
problem with the standard composite resin
filling, a natural-looking restoration
that is the method of choice when
appearance is an issue. A dentist creates
the filling by mixing the pure liquid
resin with a powder that contains
coloring, reinforcement and other
materials, packing the resulting paste
into the cavity, and illuminating the
tooth with a light that causes the paste
to polymerize and harden. For
decay-fighting composite fillings, the
problem arises from an additive that is
included in the powder to provide a steady
release of calcium and phosphate ions.
These ions are essential to the long-term
success of the filling because they not
only strengthen the crystal structure of
the tooth itself, but buffer it against
the decay-causing acid produced by
bacteria in the mouth. Yet the available
ion-releasing compounds are structurally
quite weak, to the point where they weaken
the filling as a whole.
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