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  2. Dental composite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_composite

    Dental composite resins (better referred to as "resin-based composites" or simply "filled resins") are dental cements made of synthetic resins. Synthetic resins evolved as restorative materials since they were insoluble, of good tooth-like appearance, insensitive to dehydration, easy to manipulate and inexpensive.

  3. Dental compomer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_compomer

    Compomers are resin-based materials like dental composites, and the components are largely the same.. The setting reaction is similarly a polymerisation process of resin monomers (e.g. urethane dimethacrylate) which have been modified by polyacid groups, and is induced by free radicals released from a photoinitiator such as camphorquinone.

  4. Dental material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_material

    Composite resin fillings (also called white fillings) are a mixture of nanoparticles [19] [20] [21] or powdered glass and plastic resin, and can be made to resemble the appearance of the natural tooth. Although cosmetically superior to amalgam fillings, composite resin fillings are usually more expensive.

  5. Dental cement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_cement

    Resin cements are not cements in a narrow sense, but rather polymer based composite materials. ISO 4049: 2019 [4] classifies these polymer-based luting materials according to curing mode as class 1 (self-cured), class 2 (light-cured), or class 3 (dual-cured). Most of the commercially available products are class 3 materials, combining chemical ...

  6. Dental restoration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_restoration

    A 2003 study showed that fillings have a finite lifespan: an average of 12.8 years for amalgam and 7.8 years for composite resins. [20] Fillings fail because of changes in the filling, tooth or the bond between them. Secondary cavity formation can also affect the structural integrity the original filling.

  7. Inlays and onlays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inlays_and_onlays

    Opposed to this, direct composite filling pastes shrink a few percent in volume during hardening. This can lead to shrinkage stress and rarely to marginal gaps and failure. Although improvements of the composite resins could be achieved in the last years, solid inlays do exclude this problem. [3]