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  3. Dental Procedures
  4. Filling Cavities

Filling Cavities

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  • How to Fill Cavities in a Tree

    Tree cavities are holes in a tree trunk that can vary in diameter and depth. These cavities often occur naturally, but can occasionally endanger the tree structurally, or provide a home for ants, hornets or mosquitos due to the collection of standing water. Tree experts often recommend against filling a tree cavity because it can make the tree unstable over time. If you find it necessary to fill your tree’s cavities, use expandable foam to help support the tree and prevent moisture from entering the hole.

  • How to Fill Wall Cavities With Polyurethane Foam

    Heat loss from the home is one of the great causes of energy waste and high utility bills during the winter. If you have an older home, the walls might not have proper insulation to protect against cold air. Adding regular insulation to sealed walls can prove difficult and costly. Instead, use foam insulation. Foam is made of polyurethane, which you can blow into the wall in a liquid form. After a few hours, the foam will set hard, insulating your walls from heat loss.

  • Differences Between Inlay and Onlay

    Otherwise known as indirect fillings, inlays and onlays are restorative dental solutions for repairing minor and major tooth decay damage. Inlays and onlays differ in their purpose, size, placement and procedural alternatives.

  • Cardiac Percussion

    Many components of the physical assessment performed by a doctor have been replaced with modernized tests involving mechanical equipment. However, according to the Mayo Clinic, cardiac percussion remains a frequently used technique to assist cardiologists in the diagnosis of certain heart and lung conditions that may require more intense diagnostic procedures.

  • Buried Bumper Syndrome

    A percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube, commonly known as a feeding or PEG tube, gives nutrition to patients unable to feed themselves. The tube is surgically inserted into the patient’s stomach, and nutrients are fed through the endoscopic tube. Buried bumper syndrome occurs when the PEG tube migrates between the stomach wall and the skin. It's a serious complication that can require surgery.

  • Mural Endocardium Definition

    Mural endocardium is the medical term for the lining of the heart chamber walls. This lining has a specific function and particular dangerous medical conditions associated with it, especially for those who have had a history of heart trouble.

  • Research on Hemangiomas

    A hemangioma, also called a strawberry nevus, is an abnormal build up of blood vessels from an unknown cause. These can occur in the skin or the internal organs and are usually present at birth, although they also can show themselves a few months later. When on the skin, they are visible red lesions. They tend to be most alarming to parents when they are present on the face or head of infants. Most are treatable, but some are dangerous.

  • Inlays Vs. Crowns

    A dental inlays and crowns are restorative appliances that are permanently affixed to a tooth. The extent of decay or damage that a tooth has sustained determines whether an inlay or crown is needed. Both are coverings that preserve the tooth from further decay and maintain the spacing and alignment of the teeth (called the bite) for proper functioning. Inlays and crowns involve more extensive procedures than a filling. As such, inlays and crowns are customized for fit and can be made to match the natural color of the teeth.

  • How Do Dentists Fill Cavities?

    A dentist will do a visual exam with a pick called an explorer or take x-rays to determine the location of any cavities in the mouth. After one is found, the patient is given a local anesthetic injection in the gums. This will deaden the nerves in the teeth and gums during the procedure.

  • How Does a Dentist Fill a Cavity?

    A cavity is a small dental infection of the tooth that is comprised of bacteria and is treated with a filling. Discover how a dentist fills a cavity by numbing the patient, cleaning the cavity and filling it with tips from a dentist in this free video on dental health and oral hygiene.

  • How to Fill a Cavity

    In dental health, a cavity is a hole in a tooth that is filled with white fillings. Find out how fillings can stop a cavity from progressing into tooth nerves with information from a general dentist in this free video on dental care.

  • How to Temporarily Repair a Lost Filling

    If you've ever lost a filling, you undoubted know that dentist rarely consider the occaision a dental emergency. Some lost fillings can be painful to endure in the interim. Here is a quick fix to sustain you until you can make it to your dental appointment for repair.

  • How to Compare Silver Alloy, Gold, Porcelain or Resin as a Filling for Cavities

    When a tooth is damaged by tooth decay to the point of causing a cavity, it is necessary to get a filling from a dentist to restore the tooth and prevent additional decay. After the decay is removed, a filling material is bonded to the tooth. There are several different types of filling materials used, including silver alloy (also called amalgam), gold, porcelain and composite resin. No one type of material is right in every situation. To decide which one will work for your cavity, you have to consider many different factors.

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