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Dental fillings are metallic or ceramic based substances used to fill in cavities in your tooth. Cavities are holes in the enamel of your tooth that usually expose underlying dentin. Very large cavities or cracks in your tooth that have eroded past the dentin down to the nerve root may require other interventions, such as a root canal, instead of fillings. What types of filling are there? Dental fillings are of two main types:
(see "Composite fillings" for more in-depth information) Why do I need to have my cavities filled? Cavities are caused by breakdown of tooth enamel which exposes underlying structures that are much less resistant to infection and decay. Left untreated cavities can result in both the destruction of involved teeth as well as infection of the surrounding gums and bones. Filling cavities stops this process. Which type of filling is best? There is no single correct answer to this. Factors to consider (in conjunction with a dentist) include cost, cavity location, cavity size, cosmetic results and possible health considerations.
Are silver (amalgam) fillings safe? Although amalgam fillings have been used for over 150 years and no verifiable adverse health effects have been documented aside form a rare allergic reaction no large scale studies have been done demonstrating either the presence or absence of adverse health effects. Consensus among major dental organizations, based on years of use and lack of verifiable toxic effects of dental amalgam, is that amalgam fillings are certainly safe. Indeed, a vast majority of persons with amalgam fillings probably have little to worry about from their fillings. However, all forms of mercury are toxic to humans and very small amounts of mercury vapors are released from amalgam fillings. The minimum amount of mercury exposure required to cause symptoms in the most sensitive individuals is not known. Currently, all dental, public health and major scientific organizations agree that amalgam based fillings should not be replaced for prevention of "potential mercury toxicity". Replacement of perfectly good fillings adds great expense as well as increasing mercury exposure. Dentists touting such preventative removal services while claiming amalgam fillings cause a wide spectrum of human disease are viewed as opportunistic and possibly unethical. See: Current Controversies in Dentistry-Are Amalgams Safe? for more in-depth coverage of this topic Doctors Corner INternet Group, Inc. 1997-2004
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