Endodontic Materials in Clinical Practice. Группа авторов

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amount of bonding tooth tissue available for a direct composite resin restoration. (c) Direct composite resin build‐up. (d) Occlusal view of completed restoration. (e) Buccal view of composite resin restoration.

      Source: Phillip L. Tomson.

Schematic illustration of direct pulp capping. (a) Deep carious lesion extending to the pulp. (b) Carious exposure of the pulp following cavity preparation. (c) Calcium silicate cement directly interfacing with the pulp following definitive restoration. Schematic illustration of partial pulpotomy. (a) Deep carious lesion extending to the pulp. (b) Removal of the superficial pulp tissue where it is inflamed. (c) Calcium silicate cement directly interfacing with the pulp following definitive restoration.

Schematic illustration of full pulpotomy. (a) Deep carious lesion extending to the pulp. (b) Removal of the whole of the coronal portion of the pulp. (c) Calcium silicate cement directly interfacing with pulp stumps at the canal orifice following definitive restoration. Schematic illustration of pulpectomy. (a) Deep carious lesion extending to the pulp, resulting in irreversible change. (b) Complete removal of the pulp tissue and cleaning and preparation of the root canal system prior to root filling. (c) Obduration of the root canals with gutta-percha following definitive restoration.

      2.4.1 The Role of the Material

      For predictable and successful VPT, careful material selection is required. The demands on the material itself are numerous, as it is situated in a unique environment in which it must interface with vital tissue that has a blood supply, hard dental tissues, and other restorative materials. Historically, numerous different materials have been used in VPT, including gold foil [88], aqueous calcium hydroxide [89], commercial preparations of calcium hydroxide [90], glycyrrhetinic acid/antibiotic mixture [91], resin bonding agents [92], corticosteroid/antibiotic mixture [93], isobutyl cyanoacrylate [94], resin‐modified glass ionomer [95], and, more recently, HCSC [96].

      The fundamental aim of any material used in VPT is to maintain a viable pulp so that it can continue normal homeostatic and protective functions of the tooth. As the pulp has the ability to lay down dental hard tissue in the form of reactionary or reparative dentine, the chosen material should promote this response in order

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