I know this is a poorly written question but...Underneath an amalgam, if you decrease the amount of base it will increase the resistance of fracture for the amalgam.
The answer on the exam was false, please for the love of god explain why.
The less base then the less likely of fracture. (increasing the resistance of fracture is the same as decreasing the risk of fracture).

I know this is a poorly written question but...Underneath an amalgam, if you decrease the amount of base it will increase the resistance of fracture for the amalgam.
The answer on the exam was false, please for the love of god explain why.
I know this is a poorly written question but...Underneath an amalgam, if you decrease the amount of base it will increase the resistance of fracture for the amalgam.
The answer on the exam was false, please for the love of god explain why.
The only explanation would be fit the answer would be for the base to refer to the depth of the prep (pulpal depth)... so if you decrease the base (depth) then the amalgam would be thinner and as a result more prone to fracture...
the terminology used on the question sucks 😱

thanks for the reply. so why would that statement be false?
This is what I was thinking. If Vitrebond was as strong as amalgam, you'd just use it for the whole filling. 🙂Check into the compressive strength of a base vs. the compressive strength of amalgam😉![]()
I know this is a poorly written question but...Underneath an amalgam, if you decrease the amount of base it will increase the resistance of fracture for the amalgam.
The answer on the exam was false, please for the love of god explain why.
I know this is a poorly written question but...Underneath an amalgam, if you decrease the amount of base it will increase the resistance of fracture for the amalgam.
The answer on the exam was false, please for the love of god explain why.
because false is longer than true