I heard about this recently, is it true are they getting rid of amalgam for good? anyone know why ?
The NYC rent is too damn high!
Dear Students and Faculty,
In recognition of the environmental impact of the mercury in amalgam, the new paradigms of minimally invasive dentistry and the well established performance record of new dental materials, the College has decided that we will no longer recommend dental amalgam as the primary posterior tooth restorative. We will no longer require students to perform competency examinations that mandate amalgam restorations. Students will need to obtain faculty permission specifically to convert a preparation to an amalgam restoration. Please note, this policy does NOT recommend the removal of sound amalgams and it does NOT imply that amalgam is unsafe for patient care!
Please feel free to comment if you need additional information.
Best
MSW
Mark S. Wolff, DDS, PhD
Professor and Chair
Associate Dean for Pre-doctoral Clinical Education
Department of Cariology and Comprehensive Care
New York University College of Dentistry
Ph: 212-998-9666
I've attempted preps for composite and amalgam on plastic teeth (which cut like butter...or burn) and tinkered with the material. But I obviously know nothing. But to those who have done the real thing, how different are the preps and working working (shaping?) the material?
As long as I have patients walking in my door who need say #31 lingual restored, all of whom seem to have some degree of macroglossia and also coincidentally enough seem to have a salivary flow rate similar to that of the flow rate of water over Niagra Falls, amalgam will be in my office!
By far and away, amalgam ISN'T my primary direct restorative material these days, but there are certain clinical situations where until an alternative restorative material can be invented where moisture control during it's placement is essentially irrevelevant, there are plenty of cases where amalgam is the best, most cost effective material that we as dentists can use
Or rope-like saliva that your assistant goes to suction and then drags along the suction as she comes out and perfectly falls right into the preparation you just bonded.
There's always gold...
As I recently joked with a nurse I was working on who asked me about both mercury and BPA...I could just fill all your teeth with gold and gold foil. How does 2.5 hours in the chair for 5 fillings at a cost of $2500 sound?
I've never done a gold foil in my life...I have no idea how long it takes or what is a reasonable charge...I just felt like joking about it with all the recent BPA news