cover

Summitt’s Fundamentals of Operative Dentistry:
A Contemporary Approach

Fourth Edition

Hilton_eBook_0003_001

Edited by

Thomas J. Hilton, DMD, MS

Alumni Centennial Professor in Operative Dentistry

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

Oregon Health and Science University

Portland, Oregon

Jack L. Ferracane, PhD

Professor and Chair

Department of Restorative Dentistry

Division Director, Biomaterials and Biomechanics

School of Dentistry

Oregon Health and Science University

Portland, Oregon

James C. Broome, DDS, MS

Professor and Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs

Department of Restorative Sciences

School of Dentistry

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Birmingham, Alabama

Illustrations by

José dos Santos, Jr, DDS, PhD

São Paulo, Brazil

Hilton_eBook_0003_002

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Fundamentals of operative dentistry.

  Summitt’s fundamentals of operative dentistry : a contemporary approach / edited by Thomas J. Hilton, Jack L. Ferracane, James C. Broome ; Illustrations by José dos Santos Jr. -- Fourth edition.

p. ; cm.

Fundamentals of operative dentistry
Operative dentistry

Preceded by Fundamentals of operative dentistry / edited by James B. Summitt ... [et al.]. 3rd ed. c2006.

Includes bibliographical references.

eISBN 978-0-86715-861-8 I. Hilton, Thomas J., editor of compilation. II. Ferracane, Jack L., editor of compilation. III. Broome, James C., editor of compilation. IV. Title. V. Title: Fundamentals of operative dentistry. VI. Title: Operative dentistry.

[DNLM: 1. Dentistry, Operative--instrumentation. 2. Dentistry, Operative--methods. 3. Dental Caries--therapy. 4. Dental Materials--therapeutic use. 5. Dental Prosthesis. 6. Esthetics, Dental. WU 300]

RK501

617.6’05--dc23

2013016328

5 4 3 2 1

Hilton_eBook_0004_002

© 2013 Quintessence Publishing Co Inc

Quintessence Publishing Co Inc
4350 Chandler Drive
Hanover Park, IL 60133
www.quintpub.com

All rights reserved. This book or any part thereof may not be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, or otherwise, without prior written permission of the publisher.

Editor: Bryn Grisham
Design: Will Jotzat
Production: Sue Robinson
Printed in China

To my wife and best friend, DeaDea, for her constant love, support, and encouragement; to my parents for instilling in me the qualities that have served me throughout my life; and to my role models and mentors, including the coeditors and book’s new namesake, for inspiring me to strive for excellence.
—TJH

To Tricia, my wife and best friend, whose support in all things means more to me than she will ever know.
—JLF

To my beautiful granddaughter, Sophia McAlister Ward, and the women who made me a grandfather—my wife and true love, Mary, and my wonderful daughter, Kristy.
—JCB


In Memoriam

Hilton_eBook_0005_001

Dr J. D. (Dave) Overton, DDS (1953–2013)

Dr J. D. (Dave) Overton, dds, an author of two chapters in this book, passed away on April 20, 2013, at the age of 60 years following a 4-year battle with mesothelioma. Dave was a superb operative dentistry educator, and, for 10 years, he was the leader of the faculty who taught operative dentistry at the Dental School at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio. He was unwavering in his devotion to student learning and dedicated to ensuring that the operative dentistry curriculum at his institution was based on the best evidence. That dedication is reflected in his contributions to this textbook. He will be greatly missed. His legacy of excellence in operative dentistry will benefit present and future generations of dental professionals and their patients.


Contents

In Memoriam

Preface

Contributors

01 Biologic Considerations

Terry J. Fruits, Sharukh S. Khajotia, and Jerry W. Nicholson

01 Patient Evaluation and Problem-Oriented Treatment Planning

William F. Rose, Jr, Carl W. Haveman, and Richard D. Davis

01 Esthetic Considerations in Diagnosis and Treatment Planning

J. William Robbins

01 Color and Shade Matching

Rade D. Paravina

01 Caries Management: Diagnosis and Treatment Strategies

Bennett T. Amaechi, J. Peter van Amerongen, Cor van Loveren, and Edwina A. M. Kidd

01 Pulpal Considerations

Thomas J. Hilton and James B. Summitt

01 Nomenclature and Instrumentation

James B. Summitt

01 Field Isolation

James B. Summitt

01 Adhesion to Enamel and Dentin

Lorenzo Breschi, Jack L. Ferracane, Milena Cadenaro, Annalisa Mazzoni, and Thomas J. Hilton

01 Direct Anterior Restorations

Marcos A. Vargas, Cathia Bergeron, David F. Murchison, Joost Roeters, and Daniel C. N. Chan

01 Direct Posterior Esthetic Restorations

Thomas J. Hilton and James C. Broome

01 Amalgam Restorations

J. D. Overton, James B. Summitt, and John W. Osborne

01 Diagnosis and Treatment of Root Caries

Bruce A. Matis, Carlos González-Cabezas, and Michael A. Cochran

01 Fluoride-Releasing Materials

Deniz Cakir-Ustun, Nathaniel C. Lawson, and John O. Burgess

01 Class 5 Restorations

J. D. Overton, Thomas J. Hilton, Mark L. LittleStar, and Clifford B. Starr

01 Natural Tooth Bleaching

Van B. Haywood, Juliana da Costa, and Thomas G. Berry

01 Porcelain Veneers

Jeffrey S. Rouse and J. William Robbins

01 Anterior Ceramic Crowns

Jeffrey S. Rouse

01 Esthetic Inlays and Onlays

Dennis J. Fasbinder, Gisele Neiva, and J. William Robbins

01 Cast Gold Restorations

Patrice P. Fan, Richard Stevenson, and Thomas G. Berry

01 Restoration of Endodontically Treated Teeth

James C. Broome and J. William Robbins


Preface

This textbook is about contemporary operative dentistry. The Academy of Operative Dentistry has defined operative dentistry as that branch of dentistry concerned with the management of teeth, by direct or indirect means, that are defective through disease, trauma, wear, and/or abnormal development, or are unesthetic, to a state of normal form, function, health, and appearance. This includes preventive/preservative, diagnostic, biologic, mechanical, and therapeutic procedures, applying all relevant aspects of dental technology and biomaterials and other oral and dental sciences.

The book is a blend of traditional, time-proven methods and recent scientific developments. Whereas preparations for cast gold restorations have changed relatively little over the years, preparations for amalgam and resin composite restorations are smaller and allow for less sound tooth structure to be removed because of the development of adhesive technologies. While we still use many luting agents in the traditional manner, adhesive cements provide greater retention for cast restorations and allow expanded use of ceramic and resin composite materials. Many concepts of caries management and pulpal protection have changed drastically as well. It is our hope that this textbook, which represents an ardent effort to present current concepts and the latest scientific evidence in restorative and preventive dentistry, will be helpful to students, educators, and practicing dentists during this time of rapidly developing technologies.

Several themes echo throughout this textbook. The first is the attempt to provide a scientific basis for the concepts described. The authors are clinically active, and many are engaged in clinical and laboratory research in the areas of cariology, restorative dentistry, and/or dental materials. Whenever possible, the diagnosis and treatment options described are based on current research findings. When convincing evidence is not available, we have attempted to present a consensus founded on a significant depth of experience and informed thought.

A second theme reflected in the book is our commitment to conservative dentistry. The treatment modalities described involve the preservation of as much sound tooth structure as possible within the framework of the existing destruction and the patient’s expectations for esthetic results. When disease necessitates a restoration, it should be kept as small as possible. However, it must be kept in mind that a conservative philosophy is also based on predictability. The treatment that is most predictable in terms of functional and esthetic longevity, based as much as possible on scientific evidence, must also be considered the most conservative. Therefore, when an extensive amount of tooth structure has been destroyed and remaining cusps are significantly weakened, occlusal coverage with a restoration may be the most predictable and therefore most conservative treatment. When portions of axial tooth surfaces are healthy, their preservation is desirable. In the conservative philosophy on which this book is based, a complete-coverage restoration (complete crown) is generally considered the least desirable treatment alternative, unless the tooth condition is such that a complete-coverage restoration will provide the most predictable clinical outcome.

The book describes techniques for the restoration of health, function, and esthetics of individual teeth and the dentition as a whole. Included are descriptions of direct conservative restorations fabricated from dental amalgam, resin composite, and resin-ionomer materials. Also detailed are techniques for partial- and complete-coverage indirect restorations of gold alloy, ceramics, metal-ceramic, and resin composite.

This fourth edition has been updated with new information based on evidence reported since the third edition. Because of new evidence, all chapters were revised, reference lists were expanded, and new authors were added to 11 chapters. A new chapter on color and shade matching has been added because of the increased emphasis on esthetic procedures in restorative dentistry. In addition, the chapter on adhesion to enamel and dentin has been completely rewritten.

This edition has also undergone a change in editorship with Tom Hilton taking the role of lead editor and the addition of Jack Ferracane and Jim Broome as co-editors, both of whom participated in the planning, editing, and revision of this textbook as a whole and were invaluable and tireless in seeing this project through.

As in the previous editions, the primary objective in producing this book is to provide students and practitioners with current and practical concepts of prevention and management of caries as a disease and of restoration of individual teeth. It is our hope that the changes made in this edition will make it of greater benefit to those who use it.


Hilton_eBook_0009_001

Title Change to this Edition

One of the significant changes to the fourth edition of the textbook is the title, with the addition of “Summitt’s” before Fundamentals of Operative Dentistry: A Contemporary Approach. This addition is to honor Dr James B. Summitt, long-time clinician, educator, and researcher and the lead editor of the previous two editions of this book. He has been and continues to be a mentor to virtually all of the editors and authors of this textbook, as well as to many in the profession. Earlier versions of the preface have noted that Dr G. V. Black, the father of operative dentistry, was one of dentistry’s greatest innovators and original thinkers. Dr Summitt is of the same breed as G. V. Black. While trained in traditional operative techniques and materials, Dr Summitt has always led the advance of new technology and innovation. Dr Summitt embodies the essence of what this textbook is about: looking to recent scientific innovations and incorporating them into our practices and dental school curricula. We are humbled and honored to know Dr Summitt as a personal friend, advocate for the profession, relentless devotee to evidence-based dentistry, and, most importantly, a role model of character and integrity.


Contributors

Bennett T. Amaechi, BDS, MS, PhD, FADI

Associate Professor and Director of Cariology

Department of Comprehensive Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

Cathia Bergeron, DMD, MS

Associate Professor

Department of Operative Dentistry

Faculty of Dentistry

Université Laval

Québec City, Canada

Thomas G. Berry, DDS, MA

Professor

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dental Medicine

University of Colorado Denver

Denver, Colorado

Lorenzo Breschi, DDS, PhD

Associate Professor

Department of Medical Sciences

Division of Dental Sciences and Biomaterials

University of Trieste

Trieste, Italy

James C. Broome, DDS, MS

Professor and Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs

Department of Restorative Sciences

School of Dentistry

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Birmingham, Alabama

John O. Burgess, DDS, MS

Assistant Dean for Clinical Research

Director of the Biomaterials Graduate Program

Department of Clinical and Community Sciences

Division of Biomaterials

School of Dentistry

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Birmingham, Alabama

Milena Cadenaro, DDS, PhD, MS

Associate Professor

Department of Medical Sciences

Division of Dental Sciences and Biomaterials

University of Trieste

Trieste, Italy

Deniz Cakir-Ustun, DDS, MS

Associate Professor

Department of Clinical and Community Sciences

Division of Biomaterials

School of Dentistry

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Birmingham, Alabama

Daniel C. N. Chan, DMD, MS, DDS

Associate Dean for Clinical Services

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

University of Washington

Seattle, Washington

Michael A. Cochran, DDS, MSD

Professor Emeritus

Department of Restorative Dentistry

Division of Operative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

Indiana University

Indianapolis, Indiana

Juliana da Costa, DDS, MS

Associate Professor and Preclinical Director

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

Oregon Health and Science University

Portland, Oregon

Richard D. Davis, DDS

Private practice in endodontics

San Antonio, Texas

Patrice P. Fan, DDS, MSD, FRCD(C)

Affiliate Faculty

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

Oregon Health and Science University

Portland, Oregon

Private practice in prosthodontics

Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France

Dennis J. Fasbinder, DDS

Clinical Professor

Department of Cariology, Restorative Sciences, and

Endodontics

School of Dentistry

University of Michigan

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Jack L. Ferracane, PhD

Professor and Chair

Department of Restorative Dentistry

Division Director, Biomaterials and Biomechanics

School of Dentistry

Oregon Health and Science University

Portland, Oregon

Terry J. Fruits, DDS, MEd

Professor and Chair

Department of Operative Dentistry

Donald A. Welk Professorship of Restorative Dentistry

College of Dentistry

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Carlos González-Cabezas, DDS, MSD, PhD

Associate Professor

Department of Cariology, Restorative Sciences, and

Endodontics

School of Dentistry

University of Michigan

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Carl W. Haveman, DDS, MS

Clinical Associate Professor

Department of Comprehensive Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

Van B. Haywood, DMD

Professor

Department of Oral Rehabilitation

College of Dental Medicine

Georgia Regents University

Augusta, Georgia

Thomas J. Hilton, DMD, MS

Alumni Centennial Professor in Operative Dentistry

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

Oregon Health and Science University

Portland, Oregon

Sharukh S. Khajotia, BDS, MS, PhD

Assistant Dean for Research and Graduate Programs

Professor and Chair

Department of Dental Materials

College of Dentistry

Affiliate Associate Professor of Chemical, Biological and

Materials Engineering

College of Engineering

University of Oklahoma

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Edwina A. M. Kidd, BDS, DDS, PhD, DSc(Med)

Emeritus Professor

Division of Conservative Dentistry

Dental Institute

King’s College London

London, United Kingdom

Nathaniel C. Lawson, DMD

Resident

Department of Restorative Dentistry

College of Dentistry

University of Illinois at Chicago

Chicago, Illinois

Mark L. LittleStar, DDS

Assistant Professor

Department of Comprehensive Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

Bruce A. Matis, DDS, MSD

Professor Emeritus

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

Indiana University

Indianapolis, Indiana

Annalisa Mazzoni, DDS, PhD

Associate Researcher

Department of Medical Sciences

Division of Dental Sciences and Biomaterials

University of Trieste

Trieste, Italy

David F. Murchison, DDS, MMS

Clinical Professor

Department of Diagnostic Sciences

Baylor College of Dentistry

Texas A&M Health Science Center

Dallas, Texas

Gisele Neiva, DDS, MS

Clinical Associate Professor

Department of Cariology, Restorative Sciences, and

Endodontics

School of Dentistry

University of Michigan

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Jerry W. Nicholson, MA, DDS

Professor Emeritus

Department of Restorative Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

John W. Osborne, DDS, MSD

Professor Emeritus

Department of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dental Medicine

University of Colorado Denver

Denver, Colorado

J. D. Overton, DDS*

Clinical Associate Professor

Department of Restorative Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

Rade D. Paravina, DDS, MS, PhD

Director for Houston Center for Biomaterials and Biomimetics

Associate Professor

Department of Restorative Dentistry and Prosthodontics

School of Dentistry

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Houston, Texas

J. William Robbins, DDS, MA

Private practice in general dentistry

Clinical Professor

Department of General Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

Joost Roeters, DDS, PhD

Professor

Department of Cariology, Endodontology, and Pedodontology

College of Dental Science

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center

Nijmegen, The Netherlands

William F. Rose, Jr, DDS

Assistant Professor

Department of Comprehensive Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

Jeffrey S. Rouse, DDS

Private practice in prosthodontics

Clinical Adjunct Associate Professor

Department of Prosthodontics

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

Clifford B. Starr, DMD

Clinical Professor

Department of Operative Dentistry

College of Dentistry

University of Florida

Jacksonville, Florida

Richard Stevenson, DDS

Professor and Chair

Division of Restorative Dentistry

School of Dentistry

University of California, Los Angeles

Los Angeles, California

James B. Summitt, DDS, MS

Clinical Professor

Department of Comprehensive Dentistry

Dental School

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

San Antonio, Texas

J. Peter van Amerongen, DDS, PhD

Former Associate Professor

Department of Cariology, Endodontology, and Pedodontology

Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA)

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Cor van Loveren, DDS, PhD

Professor

Department of Preventive Dentistry

Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA)

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Marcos A. Vargas, DDS, MS

Professor

Department of Family Dentistry

College of Dentistry

University of Iowa

Iowa City, Iowa

Hilton_eBook_0013_001

Biologic Considerations

Terry J. Fruits
Sharukh S. Khajotia
Jerry W. Nicholson

Success in clinical dentistry requires a thorough understanding of the anatomical and biologic nature of the tooth, with its components of enamel, dentin, pulp, and cementum, as well as the supporting tissues of bone and gingiva (Fig 1-1; see also Fig 1-9a). Dentistry that violates the physical, chemical, and biologic parameters of tooth tissues can lead to premature restoration failure, compromised coronal integrity, recurrent caries, patient discomfort, or even pulpal necrosis.

Hilton_eBook_0014_001

Fig 1-1 Component tissues and supporting structures of the tooth. DEJ—dentinoenamel junction.

The principles, materials, and techniques that constitute operative dentistry are effective only when utilized within a framework based on these biologic parameters. This chapter presents a morphologic and histologic review of tooth tissues with emphasis on their clinical significance for the practice of restorative dentistry.

Enamel

Enamel provides the shape and hard, durable outer surface of teeth, which protects the underlying dentin and pulp (see Fig 1-9a). Both color and form contribute to the esthetic appearance of enamel. Much of the art of restorative dentistry comes from efforts to simulate the color, texture, translucency, and contours of enamel with synthetic dental materials, such as resin composite or porcelain. Nevertheless, the lifelong preservation of the patient’s own enamel is one of the defining goals of the discipline of operative dentistry. Although enamel is capable of lifelong service, its crystalline mineral makeup and rigidity, exposed to an oral environment of occlusal, chemical, and bacterial challenges, make it vulnerable to acid demineralization, attrition (wear), and fracture (Fig 1-2). Mature enamel is unique compared with other tissues because, besides alterations in its mineral content, repair or replacement can only be accomplished through dental therapy.

Hilton_eBook_0014_002

Fig 1-2 Observations of clinical importance on the tooth surface.

Permeability

At maturity, enamel is 96% inorganic hydroxyapatite mineral by weight and more than 86% hydroxyapatite mineral by volume. Enamel also contains a small volume of organic matrix, as well as 4% to 12% by volume water, which is contained in the intercrystalline spaces and in a network of micropores opening to the external surface.1 These microchannels form a dynamic connection between the oral cavity and the pulpal interstitial space and dentinal tubule fluids.2 Various fluids, ions, and low–molecular weight substances, whether deleterious, physiologic, or therapeutic, can diffuse through the semipermeable enamel. Therefore, the dynamics of acid demineralization, reprecipitation or remineralization, fluoride uptake, and vital bleaching therapy are not limited to the surface but are active in three dimensions.36 When teeth become dehydrated, as from nocturnal mouth breathing or rubber dam isolation for dental treatment, the empty micropores make the enamel appear chalky and lighter in color (Fig 1-3). The condition is reversible with return to the “wet” oral environment. There is some evidence that the permeability of the enamel decreases with age and may be affected by various dental procedures, such as tooth whitening, acid etching, or the physical removal of the outermost layer of enamel.79

Hilton_eBook_0015_001

Fig 1-3 Color change resulting from dehydration. The right central incisor was isolated by rubber dam for approximately 5 minutes. Shade matching of restorative materials should be determined with full-spectrum lighting before isolation.

Lifelong exposure of semipermeable enamel to the ingress of elements from the oral environment into the mineral structure of the tooth results in coloration intensity and resistance to demineralization. The yellowing of older teeth may be attributed to thinning or increased translucency of enamel, accumulation of trace elements in the enamel structure, and perhaps the sclerosis of mature dentin. This yellowing may be treated conservatively with at-home or in-office bleaching. The enamel remineralization process benefits from the incorporation of fluoride from water sources or toothpaste and from the fluoride concentrated in the biofilm (plaque) that adheres to enamel surfaces. Enamel damaged by acid-producing biofilm bacteria can be repaired by remineralization with fluoride, which increases the rate of conversion of hydroxyapatite into more stable and less acid-soluble crystals of fluorohydroxyapatite or fluoroapatite.10 There has been a considerable amount of research recently directed at further enhancing the effectiveness of fluoride remineralization by creating new delivery systems that increase the available calcium and phosphate required to form fluoro-hydroxyapatite and fluoroapatite.11 With aging, color (hue) is intensified, but acid solubility of enamel, pore volume, water content, and permeability are reduced, although a basic level of permeability is maintained.12

Clinical appearance and defects

The dentist must pay close attention to the surface characteristics of enamel for evidence of pathologic or traumatic conditions. Key diagnostic signs include color changes associated with demineralization, cavitation, excessive wear, morphologic faults or fissures, and cracks (see Fig 1-2).

Color

Enamel translucency is directly related to the degree of mineralization, and its color is primarily a function of its thickness and the color of the underlying dentin. From approximately 2.5 mm at cusp tips and 2.0 mm at incisal edges, enamel thickness decreases significantly below deep occlusal fissures and tapers to become very thin in the cervical area near the cementoenamel junction (CEJ). Therefore, the young anterior tooth has a translucent gray or slightly bluish hue near the incisal edge. A more chromatic yellow-orange shade predominates cervically, where dentin shows through thinner enamel. Coincidentally, in about 10% of teeth, a gap between enamel and cementum in the cervical area leaves vital, potentially sensitive dentin completely exposed.13

Anomalies of development and mineralization, extrinsic stains, antibiotic therapy, and excessive fluoride can alter the natural color of the teeth.14 However, because caries is the primary disease threat to the dentition, enamel discoloration related to demineralization caused by acid from a few microorganisms, primarily mutans streptococci, within biofilm15 is a critical diagnostic observation. Subsurface enamel porosity from demineralization is manifested clinically as a milky white opacity termed a white spot lesion (Figs 1-2 and 1-4). Early enamel fissure–caries lesions are difficult to detect on bitewing radiographs. However, diagnostic accuracy can be improved by a systematic visual ranking of the enamel discoloration adjacent to pits and fissures, which in turn is correlated with the histologic depth of demineralization.16,17 In the later stages of enamel demineralization extending to near the dentinoenamel junction (DEJ), the white-spot opacity is evident not only when the tooth is air dried but also when it is wet with saliva.18 It may take 4 to 5 years for demineralization to progress through the enamel,19 but with improved plaque removal and remineralization, the lesion may arrest and, with time, appear normal again. In one study, 182 white spot lesions in 8-year-old children were reevaluated at age 15 years: 9% had cavitated, 26% appeared unchanged, and 51% appeared clinically sound.20 In addition, sealing an initial caries lesion with resin has also been shown to be an effective method for arresting its further development.21,22

Hilton_eBook_0015_002

Fig 1-4 (a) White spot lesion on the facial surface of the maxillary premolar. (b) Premolar with both an occlusal fissure-caries lesion (Class 1), extending into the dentin, and a proximal smooth-surface caries lesion (Class 2).

A longstanding chalky and roughened white-spot appearance of the facial or lingual enamel surface (see Fig 1-4a) may be a result of factors such as inadequate oral hygiene, a cariogenic diet, and an insufficient amount of saliva resulting from medical conditions or medication. All of these factors place the patient at a higher risk for caries.23 As the caries progresses, the overlying enamel takes on a blue or gray tint that provides a clinical sign indicating advanced dentin involvement. With the advent of effective remineralization, dentin bonding techniques, and fissure sealants, several authorities have suggested that invasive restorative procedures or replacement restorations should be considered only if caries lesion extension to dentin can be confirmed by visual signs of deep discoloration, enamel cavitation to dentin, or radiographic evidence.24,25

Cavitation

In the early stages of an enamel caries lesion, acid from the biofilm penetrates through the eroded crystal spaces to form a subsurface lesion of demineralized and porous mineral structure that appears clinically as a white spot. The acid protons follow the direction of the widened intercrystalline spaces of the affected enamel rods toward the DEJ. If the cariogenic biofilm, the etiology of the lesion, is not regularly removed through preventive measures, the lesion will progress in depth to the DEJ and into the dentin. When seen in two dimensions, as in a radiograph, smooth-surface enamel lesions are triangular, with the base of the triangle at the enamel surface; in a three-dimensional view, the proximal enamel lesion is a cone with its base equivalent in location and area to the demineralized enamel surface and its apex closest to the DEJ. The deepest demineralized enamel rods, those at the apex of the cone, are first to be demineralized to the depth of the DEJ because of their longer time of exposure to the acid concentrations produced by the biofilm. The nature of enamel caries lesions in occlusal fissures is similar, but the shape is more complex because it occurs simultaneously at the confluence of two or more cuspal lobes, each with divergent rod directions (see Fig 1-4b). In two dimensions, a fissure-caries lesion presents with the apex of the triangular-shaped lesion located where the initial demineralization occurs simultaneously in both of the opposing internal surfaces of the occlusal fissure, and as the caries process follows the divergent rods of both opposing lobes toward the dentin, the lesion widens to form a broader base that parallels the DEJ.

Along with regular plaque removal, topical fluoride applications help to limit or even reverse enamel demineralization.26 Some preventive materials attempt to replace minerals in the subsurface enamel lesion using home applications of amorphous and reactive calcium phosphate complexes.27 Another product employing synthetic hydroxyapatite in an acid paste is said to repair defects and replace crystals within a matter of minutes.28

Unless prevention or remineralization can abort or reverse the carious demineralization, the dentin structure is compromised and can no longer support the enamel, which eventually breaks away to create a “cavity” (Fig 1-5). A restoration must then be placed. Untreated, the cavitation expands to compromise the structural strength of the crown, and microorganisms proliferate and infiltrate deep into dentin to jeopardize the vitality of the pulp. When the caries lesion extends past the CEJ, as in root caries (see Fig 1-2), factors such as isolation, access, and gingival tissue response complicate the restorative procedure.

Hilton_eBook_0016_001

Fig 1-5 Maxillary molar with extensive carious dentin. This is only the initial entry through unsupported enamel into the carious dentin; the final preparation of the tooth will likely remove at least the distolingual cusp and the marginal ridge to eliminate any unsupported enamel.

Wear

Enamel is as hard as steel,29 with a Knoop Hardness Number of 343 (compared with 68 for dentin). However, enamel will wear because of attrition or frictional contact against opposing enamel or harder restorative materials, such as porcelain. The normal physiologic contact wear rate for enamel is 15 to 29 μm per year.30 Restorative materials that replace or function against enamel should have compatible wear, smoothness, and strength characteristics. Heavy occlusal wear is demonstrated when rounded occlusal cuspal contours are ground to flat facets (see Figs 1-1 and 1-2). Depending on factors such as bruxism, other parafunctional habits, malocclusion, age, and diet, cusps may be lost completely and enamel abraded away so that dentin is exposed and occlusal function compromised (Fig 1-6). In preparing a tooth for restoration, a cavity outline form should be designed so that the margins of restorative materials avoid critical, high-stress areas of occlusal contact.31 The potential effects of lost vertical dimension from tooth wear may be offset by active tooth eruption and apical cemento-genesis.32,33

Hilton_eBook_0016_002

Fig 1-6 Excessive occlusal enamel and dentin loss from a combination of bruxism, attrition, and erosion. (Courtesy of Van B. Haywood, Augusta, Georgia.)

Faults and fissures

Various defects of the enamel surface may contribute to the accumulation and retention of plaque. Perikymata (parallel ridges formed by cyclic deposition of enamel), pitting defects formed by termination of enamel rods, and other hypoplastic flaws are common, especially in the cervical area.1 Limited linear defects or craze lines result from a combination of occlusal loading and age-related loss of resiliency but are generally not clinically significant. Organic films of surface pellicle and dental cuticles, extending 1 to 3 μm into the enamel, may play key roles in ion exchange and in adhesion and colonization of bacterial plaque on the enamel surface.33,34

Of greater concern are the fissure systems on the occlusal surfaces and, to a lesser extent, on buccal and lingual surfaces of posterior teeth. A deep fissure is formed by incomplete fusion of lobes of cuspal enamel in the developing tooth. The resulting narrow clefts provide a protected niche for acidogenic bacteria and the nutrients they require (Fig 1-7; see also Fig 1-4b). It is estimated that caries lesions are five times more likely to occur in occlusal fissures and two and a half times more likely to occur in buccal and lingual fissures than in proximal smooth surfaces.35 The 2000 US Surgeon General’s report,36 which was based on a national survey of dental health, confirms that overall caries experience, especially that of smooth-surface lesions, is declining. A report from the National Center for Health Statistics, based on the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey comparing various survey time periods from 1988–1994 through 2007–2008, indicated that the incidence of untreated caries in the overall US population has been steadily decreasing.37 This survey found that the only segment of the population that had shown a significant increase in caries over this time period was the segment consisting of children who were 2 to 4 years of age.38 The fissured surfaces of the teeth are relatively inaccessible for plaque-control measures and account for nearly 90% of total decayed, missing, and filled surfaces (DMFS) in US schoolchildren. Several studies offer evidence that the physical barrier provided by an enamel-bonded resin fissure sealant is an effective preventive treatment for high-caries-risk patients and for individual teeth with incipient enamel pit and fissure lesions.3941

Hilton_eBook_0017_001

Fig 1-7 (a) Fissured occlusal surface of a maxillary premolar. (b) Cross section of the fissure shown in a.

Cracks

Although craze lines in the surface enamel are of little consequence, pronounced cracks that extend from developmental grooves across marginal ridges to axial surfaces, or from the margins of large restorations, may portend coronal or cuspal fracture. A crack defect is especially critical when the crack, viewed within a cavity preparation, extends through dentin or when the patient has pain while chewing (Fig 1-8). A cracked tooth that is symptomatic or involves dentin requires a restoration that provides complete coronal coverage or at least adhesive splinting.42,43 It should be noted, however, that even if a crack is identified early in patients with a diagnosis of reversible pulpitis and a crown is placed, subsequent root canal treatment may still be necessary in about 20% of the cases.44

Hilton_eBook_0017_002

Fig 1-8 (a) Molar with pronounced cracks extending across the mesial and distal marginal ridges. (b) Same molar with the occlusal restoration removed, exposing a mesiodistal incomplete fracture across the pulpal floor. (Courtesy of Van B. Haywood, Augusta, Georgia.)

Rod and interrod crystal structure

Enamel is a mineralized epidermal tissue. Ameloblast cells of the developing tooth secrete the organic matrix gel to define the enamel contours and initiate its mineralization. Calcium ions are transported both extra- and intracellularly to form “seeds” of hydroxyapatite throughout the developing matrix. These hydroxyapatite seeds form nidi for crystallization, and the crystals enlarge and supplant the organic matrix. The repeating molecular units of hydroxyapatite, Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2, make up the building blocks of the enamel crystal. However, the majority of apatite units exist in an impure form in which carbonate is substituted in the lattice, resulting in a destabilizing effect on the crystal. When exposed to plaque acids, the carbonated components of the crystal are the most susceptible to demineralization and the first to be solubilized. Both the therapeutic substitution of fluoride into the enamel apatite crystal and the facilitatory role of fluoride to enhance remineralization following cycles of acid dissolution are key to the dynamics of remineralization. In the presence of fluorides, enamel crystals in the incipient caries lesion are replaced or repaired with fluoroapatite or fluorohydroxyapatite, which are relatively insoluble. Therefore, the best outcome of repeated cycles of demineralization-remineralization, when accompanied by plaque control and fluoride availability, is a more caries-resistant enamel.6

The maturing ameloblast cell develops a cytoplasmic extension, the Tomes’ process, which simultaneously secretes enamel protein matrix and initiates the mineralization and orientation of enamel crystals. The divergent directions of the crystals generated from the central and peripheral surfaces of Tomes’ processes, repeated in a symmetric pattern, form the two basic structural units of enamel: cylindric enamel rods and the surrounding interrod enamel. Figure 1-9 shows electron microscope photomicrographs of enamel, progressing from a macrostructural image to ultrastructural images showing individual enamel crystals.

Hilton_eBook_0018_001

Fig 1-9 Enamel composition. (a) Scanning electron photomicrograph of a cross section of a tooth crown showing enamel as the outer protective covering for the tooth. (Bar = 1 mm.) (b) Scanning electron photomicrograph showing the complex of enamel rods and the DEJ. (Bar = 100 μm.) (c) Scanning electron photomicrograph showing enamel rods (R) and interrod enamel (IR). (Bar = 6 μm.) (d) Scanning electron photomicrograph of a cross section of enamel rods (R) and interrod enamel (IR). Note the connecting isthmus between the two enamel components and the gap (sheath) around the rods. (Bar = 10 μm.) (e) Transmission electron photomicrograph showing divergent crystal orientation in rodent enamel rod and interrod enamel. (Bar = 0.1 μm.) (f) Transmission electron photomicrograph showing the elongated hexagonal shape of hydroxyapatite crystals in enamel. The dimensions of each crystal are in the range of 30 × 60 nm. (Bar = 20 nm.) (Reprinted from Nanci12 with permission.)

The crystals in the enamel rods and interrod enamel differ only in the orientation of the crystals: Interrod crystals are almost perpendicular to rod crystals. In mature enamel, the closely packed, hexagonal crystals have cross-sectional dimensions of approximately 30 × 60 nm (see Fig 1-9f). The matrix proteins, enamelins, and water of hydration form a shell, or envelope, around each crystal. With the exception of the amorphous inner and outer enamel surface, the rod and interrod enamel are thought to be continuous throughout the thickness of the enamel. The multitude of crystals that form these two entities may also span the width of the enamel structure. The appearance of light and dark bands observed in sectioned specimens of enamel are known as Hunter-Schreger bands (Fig 1-10). This optical effect, seen under magnification in cut or fractured sections of tooth structure, is a result of the variation of light reflection from the bands of the enamel crystals that are oriented in different directions. The variation in both density and orientation of these crystals may have a direct effect on both the degree of mineral dissolution when exposed to acidic solutions as well as the susceptibility of different areas of the tooth to the development of crack lines in enamel.45,46 The crystals within the cylinders of rod enamel run parallel to the long axis of the rods, which are approximately perpendicular to the enamel surface. A narrow space filled with organic material around three-fourths of each rod, called the rod sheath, separates the two enamel units. However, the two separate enamel components are connected at the portion of the rod circumference that is not bounded by the rod sheath to form an isthmus of confluent crystals (see Fig 1-9d). In cross section, the rod core and the connecting isthmus of interrod enamel together have traditionally been described as keyhole-shaped and as the basic repeating structural unit of enamel. However, recent studies show the interrod enamel to be continuous within the enamel mass and to be a step ahead of the rod in development. Therefore, the current interpretation of the structure of enamel is that of cylindric enamel rods embedded in the surrounding interrod enamel.12

Hilton_eBook_0019_001

Fig 1-10 The appearance of Hunter-Schreger bands (alternate dark and light bands) viewed on the labial surface of a maxillary canine using reflected light. (Reprinted from Lynch et al45 with permission.)

Enamel and acid etching

The spacing and divergent orientation of the crystals in the rod and in the interrod enamel make the enamel rod differentially soluble when exposed for a brief time to weak acids. Depending on the acid, contact time, and plane of cavity preparation, either the ends or the sides of the crystals may be preferentially exposed. Different etch patterns have been described depending on the type and contact time of the etchant and whether the primary dissolution affects the rod or the interrod structure.47,48

The initial effect of acid contact in etching enamel for bonding to restorative materials is to remove about 10 μm of surface enamel, which typically contains no rod structure. Then, with rod and interrod structure exposed, the differential dissolution of enamel rod and interrod structure forms a three-dimensional macroporosity (Fig 1-11). The acid-treated enamel surface has a high surface energy so that resin monomer flows into, intimately adapts to, and polymerizes within the pores to form retentive resin tags that are up to 20 μm deep. At the same time, the internal cores of all the exposed individual crystals are solubilized to create a multitude of microporosities. It is these countless numbers of minitags, formed within the individual crystal cores, that contribute most to the enamel-resin bond.49 Because there are 30,000 to 40,000 enamel rods per square millimeter of a surface of cut enamel, and the etch penetration increases the bondable surface area 10- to 20-fold, the attachment of resin adhesives to enamel through micromechanical interlocking is extremely strong.50,51

Hilton_eBook_0019_002

Fig 1-11 Scanning electron photomicrograph of an acid-etched enamel surface. Note the keyhole-shaped rods and uneven surface formed by the disparity in depth of rod heads and rod peripheries. (Bar = 10 μm.)

As stated, the crystals within the enamel rod cylinders run parallel to the length of the enamel rods, which are approximately perpendicular to the external enamel surface. A cavity wall preparation that is perpendicular to the surface will expose predominantly the sides of both the enamel rods and their crystals. This configuration is recommended for amalgam preparations because it preserves the dentinal support of the enamel, but it does not present the optimum bondable enamel substrate. When the transverse section or face of the crystal, rather than its side, is exposed to acid, the central core of the crystal is most susceptible to acid dissolution. Resin bond strengths are twice as high when adhering to the acid-etched ends of the crystals as compared with the sides of the crystals.52 Thus, a tangential cut or bevel of approximately 45 degrees across a 90-degree cavosurface angle of a prepared cavity will expose the ends of the rods and their rod crystals. Beveling enamel cavosurface angles of cavity preparations for resin composite is generally recommended to expose the ends of the rods and to maximize the integrity of the restoration at its margins.53,54 An exception is on occlusal surfaces, where beveling would extend tapering resin margins into areas of increased stress. Regardless of the variation in the etch pattern, the orientation of the enamel crystals, or the selected tooth surface, the acid-etch modification of enamel for micromechanical retention provides a conservative, reliable alternative to macromechanical undercuts traditionally used for retention of restorations.55

Strength and resilience

Enamel is hard and durable, but the rod sheaths, where the crystals of the interrod enamel abut three-fourths of each enamel rod cylinder, form natural cleavage lines through which longitudinal fracture may occur. The tensile bond strength of enamel rods is as low as 1¼ MPa.56 The fracture resistance between enamel rods is weakened if the underlying dentinal support is pathologically destroyed or mechanically removed (Fig 1-12). Fracture dislodgment of the enamel rods that form the cavity wall or cavosurface margin of a dental restoration creates a gap defect. Leakage or ingress of bacteria and their by-products may lead to secondary caries lesions.57 Some clinical dental treatments and procedures, such as whitening treatments or acid etching prior to restorative procedures, can directly affect the mechanical properties of enamel, including its hardness and modulus of elasticity.58,59 When resin composite is adhesively bonded to approximately parallel opposing walls of a cavity preparation, stress development due to polymerization shrinkage has led to reports of enamel microcracks and crazing at margins.60,61 Therefore, beveling acute or right-angle enamel cavosurface margins so that the bond near margins is primarily to cross-sectional rods and not to the sides of rods is believed to be beneficial in preventing these fractures.62 Considering the variation in direction of enamel rods and interrod enamel and the structural damage caused by high-speed eccentric bur rotation, planing the cavosurface margin with hand instruments or low-speed rotary instruments to remove any friable or fragile enamel structure is recommended as a finishing step.

Hilton_eBook_0020_001

Fig 1-12 (a) Coronal section through an interproximal box in a cavity preparation. Use of a rotary instrument (bur), which may leave the proximal wall with an acute enamel angle and undermined enamel, requires careful planning. (b) Marginal defect, resulting from improper cavity wall preparation, leads to eventual loss of enamel at the restoration interface.

Although enamel is incapable of self-repair, its protective and functional adaptation is noteworthy. Carious demineralization to the point of cavitation generally takes several years. In comparison with the underlying dentin, enamel demineralization is much slower because the apatite crystals in enamel are 10 times larger than those in dentin63 and offer less surface-to-volume exposure to acids. The crystals are pressed so tightly together that their hexagonal shape is distorted,12 but this tight adaptation makes for little or no space for acid penetration between the crystals. With preventive measures and exogenous or salivary renewal of calcium, phosphates, and especially fluorides, the dynamics of demineralization can be stopped or therapeutically reversed. Additionally, the crystals are separated by a thin organic matrix that provides some additional strain relief to help prevent fracture.64 Studies on the mechanical properties of enamel indicate that the structural and compositional characteristics of the minor protein component found surrounding the enamel rods and individual hydroxyapatite crystals may significantly affect the mechanical properties of enamel.65

Enamel thickness and its degree of mineralization are greatest in occlusal and incisal areas of enamel where masticatory contact occurs.66 The enamel rods are grouped in bundles that undulate in an offset pattern as they course to the surface. As a functional adaptation to occlusal stress, the spiraling weave of rod direction is so pronounced at the cusp tips of posterior teeth that it is referred to as “gnarled” enamel. If enamel were uniformly crystalline, it would shatter with occlusal function. An enamel structure with divergent crystal orientations organized into two interwoven substructures—enamel rods and interrod enamel—yet bound at a connecting area by continuous crystals provides a strong latticework. The enamel rods, which are parallel to each other and perpendicular to the surface structurally, limit the lateral propagation of occlusal stress and transfer it unidirectionally to the resilient dentinal foundation.67

Dentin

Dentin provides both color and an elastic foundation for the enamel. The radicular (root) dentin covered with cementum and the coronal (crown) dentin supporting the enamel form the bulk of the structure of the tooth. The strength and durability of the coronal structures are related to dentinal integrity. To the extent that open dentinal tubules can become closed and impermeable, dentin is a protective barrier and chamber for the vital pulp tissues. As a tissue without substantive vascular supply or innervation, it is nevertheless able to respond to external thermal, chemical, or mechanical stimuli.

Dentinoenamel junction

68716869717273soft zone 74