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Assessment of a New Resin-based Composite Filling Material

University of Aarhus logo

University of Aarhus

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Restoration Defects
Caries

Treatments

Procedure: Tooth restorations with composite

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Evaluation of a new resin-based composite material.

Amalgam and composite are the most commonly used restorative materials in dentistry. Due to the toxicity of mercury and the subsequent environmental problems, the search for alternatives continues and search into new composite restorative materials intensifies. The presently available composites have improved, but shrinkage of the composite during the curing procedure is still a clinical problem. A new composite restorative material has among other advantages demonstrated lower shrinkage in laboratory studies, due to a new formulation of the material.

This project aims to study the clinical performance of this new composite compared to a commonly used composite restoration material. 72 patients (158 teeth) are allocated to the project which is carried out at the School of dentistry, University of Aarhus, Denmark.

Full description

This project aims to study the clinical performance of a new composite restoration material (Filtek Silorane®) compared to a conventional composite restoration material (Ceram X®).

Amalgam and composite are the most commonly used restorative materials, with the number of composite restorations increasing over the past 20 years. Composite restorative materials have improved considerably over the years. They have almost reached the same resistance to wear as amalgam, and are as a consequence now also used for molar restorations.

The main reasons for replacing composite restorations are fractures and caries associated with the restorations.

To reduce the risk of caries a new composite material Filtek Silorane® with reduced polymerization shrinkage has been developed.

Extensive laboratory studies have been performed on the new material, but the clinical attributes have yet to be disclosed.

The study will be carried out as a randomized, double blinded, longitudinal study, with assessment of the restorations after one year.

The project includes 72 patients, 158 teeth. Most of the patients have been recruited from the Treatment Planning Clinic at the dental school in Aarhus. After giving their consent to take part in the study, the teeth are randomized into two treatment groups. Multi surface restorations of both upper and lower molars and premolars are performed

The treatment procedure is:

The patients are offered local anesthetic before treatment start. The cavity is excavated and filled according to the guidelines for composite restorations. An impression of the cavity is taken before and after it has been filled. After treatment bw-radiographs are taken.

The control procedure is:

The restoration is evaluated according to marginal adaptation, cavo surface marginal discoloration, approximal contact, fractures, caries associated with restorations and postoperative hypersensitivity. The controls will take place after three weeks and one year.

Enrollment

72 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 90 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients registered for treatment with a posterior multi surface composite restoration.

Exclusion criteria

  • Poor oral hygiene or teeth needing endodontic treatment.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

72 participants in 2 patient groups

Ceram X
Active Comparator group
Description:
Fillings made with a traditional composite material (Ceram X)
Treatment:
Procedure: Tooth restorations with composite
Filtek Silorane
Experimental group
Description:
Fillings made with a new composite material (Filtek silorane)
Treatment:
Procedure: Tooth restorations with composite

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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