Description
This product description is designed for a B2B audience (dentists, dental practices, or procurement managers) who are selecting high-quality materials for their clinics.
Advanced Dental Filling Solutions: Restoring Oral Health, Function, and Aesthetics
Precision Materials for Superior Restorations
Our comprehensive range of dental filling materials is meticulously engineered to provide dentists with the tools necessary for creating durable, biocompatible, and aesthetically pleasing restorations. From addressing minor cavities to reconstructing significant tooth damage, our solutions ensure optimal patient outcomes and long-lasting oral health.
Key Features & Benefits:
- Exceptional Durability: Formulated for high strength and wear resistance, capable of withstanding the rigors of mastication and daily oral activity.
- Superior Aesthetics: Offering a broad spectrum of shades and translucencies, especially in our composite and ceramic lines, to seamlessly blend with natural tooth structure.
- Biocompatibility: Materials are selected and tested for excellent tissue compatibility, minimizing adverse reactions and promoting a healthy oral environment.
- Enhanced Adhesion & Retention: Advanced bonding agents and material properties ensure secure and stable restorations, reducing the risk of microleakage and secondary decay.
- Versatility: A diverse portfolio catering to various clinical situations, cavity classes, and patient preferences.
- Ease of Handling: Materials designed for optimal working time, consistency, and polishability, facilitating efficient and precise clinical application.
- Radiopacity: Ensures clear visibility on radiographs for accurate post-operative assessment and detection of recurrent caries.
Our Diverse Range of Filling Materials:
1. Composite Resin Fillings
- Description: Tooth-colored mixtures of acrylic resin and finely ground glass-like particles. Cured with a special light to harden the material.
- Advantages:
- Excellent Aesthetics: Highly customizable to match natural tooth shade, virtually invisible.
- Conservative Tooth Preparation: Requires less removal of healthy tooth structure compared to amalgam.
- Bonding Capability: Chemically bonds to the tooth, providing additional support and sealing.
- Versatile: Suitable for anterior and posterior teeth, small to moderate restorations, and cosmetic enhancements (e.g., diastema closure, minor shape corrections).
- Disadvantages:
- Technique Sensitive: Requires meticulous isolation and bonding protocols.
- Susceptible to Staining: Can stain over time from coffee, tea, and tobacco.
- Polymerization Shrinkage: Can lead to marginal gaps if not properly placed and cured.
2. Dental Amalgam Fillings (Silver Fillings)
- Description: A robust and time-tested material composed of mercury (approximately 50%), silver, tin, and copper.
- Advantages:
- Exceptional Durability & Strength: Highly resistant to wear and fracture, especially suitable for large posterior restorations.
- Cost-Effective: Generally less expensive than composite or ceramic options.
- Long-Lasting: Can last 10-15 years or longer with proper care.
- Ease of Placement: Less technique-sensitive than composites, tolerant of moisture.
- Disadvantages:
- Poor Aesthetics: Distinctive silver color is noticeable.
- No Bonding: Requires mechanical retention (undercuts) which may necessitate more tooth reduction.
- Thermal Conductivity: Can cause temporary sensitivity to hot and cold.
- Mercury Content: While deemed safe by major dental organizations in its stable, set form, patient perception can be a factor.
3. Glass Ionomer Cement (GIC) Fillings
- Description: A self-setting, tooth-colored material that releases fluoride. Composed of polyacrylic acid and fluoroaluminosilicate glass.
- Advantages:
- Fluoride Release: Acts as a caries-preventative agent, beneficial for high-risk patients.
- Chemical Bond: Bonds chemically to enamel and dentin without a separate bonding agent.
- Biocompatible: Gentle on pulp tissue.
- Good for Non-Stress Bearing Areas: Ideal for primary teeth, cervical lesions, and as a base or liner.
- Disadvantages:
- Lower Strength & Wear Resistance: Not suitable for heavy biting forces.
- Limited Aesthetics: More opaque than composites, with fewer shade options.
- Initial Moisture Sensitivity: Requires protection during initial setting.
4. Ceramic (Porcelain) Inlays/Onlays
- Description: Custom-made restorations fabricated in a dental lab (or chairside with CAD/CAM) from high-strength porcelain, then bonded to the tooth.
- Advantages:
- Superior Aesthetics: Mimics the translucency and luster of natural tooth enamel beautifully.
- High Durability: Extremely strong and resistant to wear and staining.
- Excellent Biocompatibility: Highly inert and tissue-friendly.
- Precise Fit: Laboratory fabrication ensures an accurate and tight marginal seal.
- Disadvantages:
- Higher Cost: More expensive than direct fillings due to fabrication process.
- Multiple Appointments: Typically requires two visits (unless using chairside CAD/CAM).
- Brittleness: Can be fragile until bonded into place.
5. Gold Inlays/Onlays
- Description: Custom-fabricated cast gold alloys, cemented into place.
- Advantages:
- Exceptional Durability & Longevity: Often lasts 15-20 years or more; one of the longest-lasting restorative materials.
- Biocompatibility: Well-tolerated by oral tissues.
- Strength & Resistance to Fracture: Highly resilient, does not corrode or tarnish.
- Precise Fit: Offers an excellent marginal seal.
- Disadvantages:
- High Cost: Most expensive filling option.
- Aesthetics: Distinctive gold color is not tooth-colored.
- Thermal Conductivity: Can cause temporary sensitivity.
- Multiple Appointments: Requires at least two visits.
Indications for Use:
- Restoration of carious lesions (cavities) of all classes.
- Repair of fractured or chipped teeth.
- Replacement of old, failing, or discolored existing restorations.
- Aesthetic enhancements for discolored or misshapen teeth (with composite/ceramic).
- Treatment of abraded or eroded tooth surfaces.
- Building up worn teeth.
Elevate Your Practice with Our Filling Solutions:
Partner with us to provide your patients with the highest standard of restorative care. Our commitment to research and development ensures that our dental filling materials meet the evolving needs of modern dentistry, delivering predictable, successful, and beautiful results every time.
Technical Specifications (Examples - Specifics vary by product line):
- Compressive Strength: >250 MPa (Composites), >300 MPa (Amalgam)
- Flexural Strength: >120 MPa (Composites)
- Wear Resistance: Low-wear formulations for posterior applications.
- Shade Range: VITA® A1-D4, Bleach shades, Opaque shades.
- Translucency: Available in Enamel, Dentin, and Opaque levels.
- Radiopacity: >200% Al (to ISO 4049).
- Working Time: Customizable for various applications.
- Setting Time: Light-cure options (20-40 sec/layer), self-cure options.
Ordering Information & Support:
For detailed product specifications, shade guides, clinical case studies, or to place an order, please contact our sales team or visit our website. Our technical support specialists are available to assist with product selection and application protocols.
Contact Us Today to Transform Your Restorative Practice!
Disclaimer: These dental filling materials are intended for professional dental use only by qualified practitioners. Always refer to the specific product's Instructions for Use (IFU) for complete indications, contraindications, warnings, and proper handling procedures.