Tooth Fillings

Restoring Your Smile and Preventing Further Damage

Tooth fillings are a common and effective way to repair cavities and restore the function and appearance of your teeth. At Millennium Smiles Dental Center, we use the latest techniques and materials to ensure your fillings are durable, aesthetically pleasing, and comfortable.

The dentist is performing a tooth filling on her patient

A Comfortable and Pain-Free Filling Process

To ensure a comfortable experience, we’ll begin by using a local anesthetic to numb the area around the tooth. Your dentist will then carefully remove the decayed portion of the tooth, preparing it for the filling. We use high-quality filling materials like composite resin or amalgam to restore the tooth’s shape and function. Once the filling is placed, it will be carefully polished to ensure a smooth, natural finish.

Your Filling Options: Tailored to Your Needs

We offer two main types of fillings to suit your individual needs and preferences. Composite resin fillings are tooth-colored and made from a durable, composite material that blends seamlessly with your natural teeth. They are a popular choice for front teeth due to their aesthetic appeal. Amalgam fillings, on the other hand, are silver-colored and offer a strong and affordable option for back teeth where aesthetics are less of a concern. 

Your dentist will discuss your options and recommend the best type of filling for your specific needs, considering factors such as the location of the cavity, your budget, and your aesthetic preferences.

A close-up 3D illustration of a white molar tooth with a silver amalgam dental filling on its chewing surface.

Benefits of Tooth Fillings

Fillings restore the shape and function of your teeth, allowing you to chew and speak comfortably.

Fillings seal the cavity, preventing further decay and protecting your tooth from future damage.

Tooth-colored fillings blend seamlessly with your natural teeth, enhancing your smile’s appearance.

With proper care, fillings can last for many years.

Understanding Tooth Decay: How Cavities Develop

Dental decay doesn’t happen overnight; it is a gradual process driven by the natural bacteria present inside your mouth. When you consume sugary or carbohydrate-rich foods, these bacteria produce mild acids that actively attack your outer tooth enamel.

Recognizing how decay progresses highlights why catching a cavity early with a minor dental filling is so crucial to your oral health:

Phase 1: Enamel Demineralization

In the very beginning, the bacterial acids leach essential minerals away from your outer enamel, creating tiny, chalky white spots. At this stage, the decay can occasionally be reversed with professional fluoride treatments.

Phase 2: Enamel Decay

If left unaddressed, the acid completely breaks down the hard surface enamel, forming a physical hole or cavity. Because enamel contains no nerve tissue, this phase is typically completely painless, making regular diagnostic check-ups highly important.

Phase 3: Dentin Penetration

Once the decay breaks through the enamel layer, it enters the softer, highly porous inner layer of the tooth called dentin. This layer connects directly to your tooth’s nerves, meaning you will likely begin to notice sudden sensitivity to sweet, hot, or cold items. Placing a custom tooth filling at this point stops the bacterial spread instantly.

Schedule your tooth filling appointment at Millennium Smiles Dental Center. Our dentists in Manila will work with you to determine the best type of filling for your needs and ensure a comfortable and successful procedure. Contact us today to schedule your appointment.

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Maximizing the Lifespan of Your Tooth Filling

At Millennium Smiles Dental Center, we utilize high-quality composite materials that bond directly to your natural tooth structure and cure instantly under a specialized light. This means your filling is completely solid and functional the moment you leave our dental chair.

To protect the treated tooth and ensure your new filling remains stable and pristine for a decade or more, our clinical team recommends following these basic aftercare tips:

  • Wait for the Anesthesia to Wear Off: Avoid chewing foods or drinking hot liquids while your lips, tongue, and gums remain numb from local anesthesia. This simple precaution prevents you from accidentally biting your cheek or burning your delicate oral tissues.
  • Manage Temporary Sensitivity: It is completely normal for a freshly filled tooth to experience minor sensitivity to hot or cold temperatures for a few days following treatment. Try using a toothpaste specifically formulated for sensitive teeth and avoid biting down directly on exceptionally hard items like ice or hard candies.
  • Practice Diligent Oral Hygiene: A filling protects the inner structure of a tooth, but the surrounding natural enamel can still develop new decay if plaque is allowed to accumulate. Maintain robust daily brushing, use a high-quality floss to clean around the margins of the filling, and attend your biannual dental cleanings.

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Dental FAQs: Our FAQ section answers your questions about Tooth Fillings

While dental fillings are incredibly durable and can last for many years, they are not permanent. The lifespan of a filling can vary depending on several factors, including the type of filling material, the location of the filling, and your individual oral hygiene habits.

For example, amalgam fillings, which are made of a mixture of metals, tend to last longer than composite fillings, which are tooth-colored. A well-placed amalgam filling can last 15 years or more, while a composite filling might need replacement after 10-12 years.

Regular dental checkups are essential to ensure that your fillings are still doing their job and haven't become compromised. Your dentist can assess the condition of your fillings and recommend replacement if necessary.

The process of getting a filling is generally not painful, as your dentist will administer local anesthesia to numb the area around the tooth being filled. You may feel some pressure or movement, but you shouldn't experience any sharp or stinging sensations.

However, you might experience some sensitivity after the procedure, particularly with deeper fillings or fillings near the nerve. This sensitivity is usually mild and temporary, and it should subside within a few days

Dental fillings are generally considered safe, and they are a common and effective way to restore and protect teeth that have been damaged by decay or trauma. However, there has been some controversy surrounding the safety of amalgam fillings, which contain mercury.

While the amount of mercury in amalgam fillings is considered safe by most dental organizations, some people prefer to avoid them due to concerns about potential health risks. If you are concerned about mercury, you can discuss alternative filling materials with your dentist, such as composite resin, porcelain, or gold.

Tooth fillings work by restoring damaged teeth. They fill cavities or cracks, preventing further decay and restoring the tooth's original shape and function. The dentist will remove the decayed portion of the tooth, clean the area, and then place a filling material, like composite resin or amalgam, into the cavity. The filling is then shaped and polished to create a smooth surface. This process helps protect the tooth from further decay and restores its ability to chew properly.

Tooth fillings should be replaced when they show signs of damage, like cracks, chips, or discoloration. Tooth sensitivity, pain, or a loose filling also indicate replacement is needed. Regular dental checkups help monitor fillings and catch problems early.

A standard composite filling is placed directly into a small or medium cavity and sculpted by our dentists right inside your mouth in a single visit. A dental inlay or onlay (often called a partial crown) is recommended when the structural damage or decay is too extensive for a regular filling but not severe enough to require a full dental crown. Inlays and onlays are custom-fabricated in a dental laboratory from durable porcelain to perfectly fit the large cavity space.

Yes, this is a condition known as recurrent decay. If a filling becomes worn down, cracked, or chipped over years of chewing forces, tiny microscopic gaps can open up between the filling material and your natural enamel. Bacteria can seep into these hidden spaces where your toothbrush bristles cannot reach, creating a new cavity underneath the old restoration. Regular diagnostic dental X-rays allow us to identify and replace leaking fillings early.