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. 2001 Aug;132(8):1110-6.
doi: 10.14219/jada.archive.2001.0336.

Clinical performance of resin-modified glass ionomer cement restorations in primary teeth. A retrospective evaluation

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Clinical performance of resin-modified glass ionomer cement restorations in primary teeth. A retrospective evaluation

T P Croll et al. J Am Dent Assoc. 2001 Aug.

Abstract

Background: The authors retrospectively evaluated the clinical performance of one resin-modified glass ionomer cement as a restorative material in Class I, Class II, Class III and Class V restorations in primary teeth.

Methods: A total of 306 patients who had received a total of 864 resin-modified glass ionomer restorations, which had been in their mouths for a minimum of three years, were included in this evaluation. The authors assessed the clinical observations recorded in patients' records and used bitewing radiographs to assess Class II restorations.

Results: The authors found an overall restoration success rate of 93.0 percent, with Class I restorations having a 92.6 percent success rate, Class II restorations having a 93.3 percent success rate, Class III restorations having a 100 percent success rate, and Class V restorations having a 98.0 percent success rate.

Conclusions: The resin-modified glass ionomer cement functioned well as a Class I, Class II, Class III and Class V restorative material in primary teeth.

Clinical implications: Resin-modified glass ionomer restorative cement is a durable and reliable material to use for Class I, Class II, Class III and Class V restorations in primary teeth. Therefore, dentists have a proven alternative to silver amalgam and resin-based composite for primary tooth restoration.

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