Silver vs.
White Fillings
The “silver” fillings are really
silver amalgams containing a mixture of silver-tin alloy,
copper and mercury that sets up hard and silver colored
White fillings are either
composite resin (not to be confused with true porcelain)
containing a mixture of acrylic plastics, quartz fillers and colorants or true porcelain.
True porcelain filling are called inlays (if they fit inside the cavity less than one third the
width of the tooth) or onlays (if they replace or support the cusps tips). These porcelain
restorations were generally made in a lab with two or more office visits, but with
CEREC® 3D, we now precision-mill them from factory manufactured uniform blocks in one
visit in our office. Both of these true porcelain type fillings are cemented or bonded into
place and are much more precise and biocompatible than silver or composite which are pressed into
the prepared hole (cavity) in your tooth.
The cheapest and most common
choices for filling small cavities are silver
amalgams (a mixture of silver-tin alloy, copper and mercury that sets up hard and silver
colored) and composite resin (a mixture of acrylic plastics,
quartz fillers and colorants). There are several differences besides the obviously more esthetic
results of composites over amalgams. A big difference, which insurance companies seem to consider
the most important, is longevity. Amalgams last up to 20% longer than similar composite
restorations.
For large cavities where more than
half the width of the tooth is involved, these cheaper filling materials (silver and composite) are
prone to break down. Generally, studies and my personal experience find these fillings
breakdown (to the point they need to be drilled out and redone) in the range of 3 to 5 to 7 years
when filled with composite while large amalgam fillings last a bit longer but may lead to tooth
fracture. Due to the need for more stringent moisture control and more technique-sensitive
procedures to place composite, in most dental offices white composite fillings cost more than
silver amalgam.
These two factors make silver
fillings more economical than the more natural looking composites, so that is why insurance
companies rarely approve of a composite filling in the back teeth. (They will substitute payment
for the cheaper amalgam when they receive a claim for posterior composites -- just look at any
Explanation of Benefit forms for composite filling you may have received.)
Besides being virtually
invisible, composites have a property of bonding to the tooth structure. This bonding can protect
and increase the overall strength of the tooth being restored, but if the bonding stays intact on
the biting (occlusal) surface but breakdown as it usually does in between teeth where it is thicker
and flexes more when you bite and chew food, new decay may progress deeply before it is
detected. Sometimes, the first sign of this hidden leakage under composite fillings is the
sudden onset of severe pain of a root canal nerve infection.
The choice of which restorative
material to use in your mouth depends on balancing the factors of appearance, longevity, strength
of the tooth involved, and cost. You have to decide with your dentist’s guidance as to the size of
the filling and your goals/expectations for the filling.
Which to
Choose?
Silver:
Silver has been used as a filling
for teeth for over one hundred years. While there is mercury present in the silver filling
material, called amalgam, in the past century there has been no evidence showing that silver
fillings are harmful to patients. Just like the cyanide in crazy glue where the cyanide is
compounded with other ingredients that make it harmless, the mercury in amalgam is compounded with
silver, tin, and copper to make it just as harmless. Studies about the release of mercury from
normal wear of chewing and grinding show that 5 fillings release about the same amount of mercury
as is found in a tuna fish sandwich.
Silver is a strong filling agent
lasting longer than comparable composite fillings. It also costs significantly less than composite
fillings (up to 25% less in some cases). The main argument against the use of silver fillings is
esthetic. Depending on where the tooth to be filled is located in the mouth, the appearance of a
silver filling may be less attractive than a more natural-looking composite filling. Also, for some
patients the feeling of metal in the mouth may be displeasing. Over time, like most metals, silver
fillings will eventually corrode and even leak causing decay to reoccur underneath the
fillings. There is also a slow expansion that amalgam undergoes and the part of the tooth next
to the filling may fracture over time, necessitating a much larger filling, a crown or even
extraction of the tooth if the fracture is vertically down the root below the
bone. 
Silver Amalgam Fillings: ========>
Composite
Fillings: ========>
Composite fillings are primarily a
resin which has been "filled" with other inorganic materials. This compound makes a composite
filling more resistant to wear, color adjustable, and easier to polish. The advantages of choosing
a composite filling include a more natural appearance, frequently a strengthening of the filled
tooth, and a bonding of the filling to the tooth creating a better seal. This bonding also means
that the filling can often be made smaller than a comparable silver filling since silver requires
certain size criteria be met to resist breaking or falling out. The disadvantages are that
composite fillings themselves are weaker and may last a shorter period than a silver filling. In
addition, a composite filling may cost about 25 % more than the same silver filling.
Composites suffer from what is
called dissolution. They will actually dissolve slowly over time in your mouth regardless of
whether you eat on them directly or not. In addition, they can discolor over time acquiring a
yellowish tinge. Composite fillings also may get pitted leaving pinholes on the surface, which may
pick up discoloring and stain permanently. Because composite has the largest coefficient of thermal
expansion, after being repeated exposed to cold foods such as ice cream, cold beverages which cause
the composite filling to shrink more than the tooth and then to hot foods, including coffee, tea,
soups, and heated foods which cause the composites to expand more than the tooth, the bonded joint
between the filling and the tooth will breakdown and allow fluid, food and bacteria to get in and
form recurrent decay.
CEREC® 3D Porcelain inlays and onlays
In the cases of large cavities, we
generally feel that CEREC® 3D Porcelain inlays and onlays or partial crowns are FAR
SUPERIOR to either composite or amalgam since they should last 20+ years and avoid the
controversies of amalgam and composite breakdown and possible toxic byproducts. Click here to learn
more about CEREC®
3D Porcelain inlays and onlays.
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