Dr. Robinson's Fibrous and Textile Metallic Filling is a shredded metallic alloy, mostly tin, and has the appearance of woven or felt foil. It is prepared in a machine invented by the doctor especially for the purpose, and he gives directions for using as follows: "Cut the material into strips running with the selvage, and fill as you would with soft foil; use it in all surrounding walls, and finish with a mallet burnisher. Where the surface comes to hard wear, weld on gold with long, sharp serrated pluggers, and finish the same as with gold fillings. The advantage over gold for cervical, buccal, and lingual walls is the perfect ease with which it is adapted, and it can be burnished so as to be absolutely impervious to moisture. Sharp, coarse-serrated pluggers are particularly desirable when using hand pressure." It comes in one-half-ounce boxes, filled with sheets less than two inches square; the thin ones are used for filling, and the thick ones make good linings for vulcanite. This material is easy to manipulate, but great care is required in condensing at cavity-margins, so as to make a tight filling, and also not injure the margins. It makes as hard a surface as tin foil, and In 1884 Dr. Brophy said, "I have used Robinson's material for two years, and find it possesses good qualities, and can be used in deciduous teeth, first permanent molars, and cervical margins with better results than can be obtained with any other material by the majority of operators." Malleted with deeply serrated pluggers, it will make a filling which will not leak. It has saved many teeth from caries at the cervical margin where it might have recurred sooner had cohesive For conducting properties it ranks about with tin, and fillings can be made more rapidly than with cohesive gold. We have used ounces of it, but time has proved that everything that can be done with it in filling teeth can also be accomplished as well and in some cases better with tin foil. In 1878 Dr. N. B. Slayton patented his Felt Foil, which was said to be tin cut into hair-like fibers by a machine, then pressed into small sheets and sold in one-half-ounce books, but it sold only to a very limited extent. Soon after this Dr. Jere Robinson, Sr., invented a machine and began the manufacture of a similar article, but he found he was infringing on the Slayton patent, so he purchased the Slayton machine and made satisfactory terms to continue his own manufacture of fibrous material. After this little was heard of Slayton's Felt Foil, but Robinson's was considerably used. The two materials look and are manipulated almost exactly alike. Dr. Robinson has both of above-mentioned machines now in his possession. Archibald McBride, of Pittsburg, Pa., in 1838, made a roll of a portion of a sheet of tin, and then A description of some different methods of combining and manipulating tin and gold is subjoined: (a) Two sheets of No. 4 cohesive gold and one of the same number of tin are used; place the tin between the gold, cut off strips, and use with hand or mallet force the same as cohesive gold; if non-cohesive gold is used, the strips can be folded into (b) Lay a sheet of non-cohesive gold, No. 3, on a sheet of tin of the same number, cut off strips, roll into ropes and use as non-cohesive gold. It is easily packed and harder than tin, and has a preservative action on the teeth. Line the cavity with chloro-balsam as an insulator against possible currents and moisture; especially should this be done in large cavities or chalky teeth. (c) A sheet of non-cohesive gold, No. 4, is laid on a sheet of tin of the same number, cut into strips and rolled into cylinders, or folded into blocks, always in equal portions; then they will unite to the extent of two leaves. These fillings sometimes become a solid mass about the color of amalgam, and last very well, as the metals have become united by electrolysis. An excess of tin will be marked by lines or pits in the filling, showing where the tin has been disintegrated or dissolved by the chemical action which occurs on the surface exposed to moisture. No doubt, good fillings have been made by the above methods, yet some were granular, gritty, and were easily removed, while others were quite When this combination does become hard, it wears longer than tin on an occlusal surface, but we believe that in some cases where it was used the teeth could have been saved just as well with either tin or gold, or by filling part of the cavity with tin and the rest with gold. If tin foil is laid on 22-carat gold and vulcanized, it becomes thoroughly attached and will take a tin polish; the attraction or interchange of atoms takes place to this extent. This combination of tin and gold can be used at the cervical margin, or a cavity can be lined with it, and the remainder filled with cohesive or non-cohesive gold. "Tin and gold (Tg) folded or rolled together in equal portions possesses a greater number of desirable properties than any other material, for it is easily adapted, has antiseptic action and a lower conductivity than gold. A new filling is harder than tin, softer than gold, but after a time it becomes as hard as amalgam. It oxidizes and thus "In very deep cavities use a mat of Tg, dampened "Drs. Abbot, Berlin; Jenkins, Dresden; Sachs, Breslau, have observed tin-gold fillings from fifteen to twenty-five years, and say that for certain cases it is better than any other material. I use square-pointed pluggers (four-cornered), as part of the packing is done with the side of the plugger. Tg is useful in partly erupted molars, buccal cavities under the gums, occlusal cavities in temporary teeth, cavities where all decay cannot be removed. Use Tg with a gold capping in small, deep occlusal cavities, cavities with overhanging walls, occlusal cavities with numerous fissures, large, deep occlusal cavities near the pulp, in proximal cavities. "Line labial walls of incisors with non-cohesive gold, and fill the remainder with Tg. For repairing gold fillings I use Tg." (Dr. Miller, Berlin, Dental Cosmos, 1890.) Dr. Jenkins, of Dresden, says, "I use Tg in soft, imperfect teeth, of which there are plenty in Germany, because it has pliability, adaptability, slight susceptibility to thermal changes, makes a water-tight joint, very useful at cervical margins, and can be used with a minimum amount of pressure. Dr. A. H. Thompson: "After several years' successful use of tin-gold, I commend it for approximal cavities, cervical margins, and frail walls. The oxid formed penetrates the enamel and dentin; if a filling wears down, cover the surface with gold." Dr. Pearson: "I do not like tin and gold in alternate layers. I prefer No. 10 tin foil." Dr. James Truman: "I believe that tin-gold has a positive value as a filling-material." "I prepare tin-gold by taking a sheet of No. 4 non- or semi-cohesive gold, fold them together (or twist them) so as to have the gold on the outside, and then fill any cavity with it. Since adopting the above combination I have almost abandoned amalgam. This is recommended on account of its density, ease of insertion, capacity for fine finish, non-conducting and non-shrinking qualities, and compatibility with tooth-substance. Those who have not used it will be surprised at the rapidity "Pure tin foil is employed in connection with non-cohesive gold in filling proximal cavities in bicuspids and molars; a sheet of gold and a sheet of tin are folded together." (C. J. Essig: "Prosthetic Dentistry.") Dr. Benj. Lord says, "A combination in which I find great interest is in the use of soft or non-cohesive gold with tin foil. This is no novelty in practice, but I think that, for the most part, too great a proportion of tin has been used, and hence has arisen the objection that the tin dissolved in some mouths. I am satisfied that I myself until recently employed more tin than was well. I now use from one-tenth to one-twelfth as much tin as gold, and no disintegration or dissolving away of "The two metals should be thoroughly incorporated by manipulation. Then, after a time, there will be more or less of an amalgamation. By using about a sixteenth of tin, the color of the gold is so neutralized that the filling is far less conspicuous than when it is all gold, and I very often use such a proportion of tin in cavities on the labial surfaces of the front teeth. "If too much tin is employed in such cases, there will be some discoloration of the surface of the fillings; but in the proportion that I have named no discoloration occurs, and the surface of the filling will be an improvement on gold in color." "Dr. Howe. I would like to ask Dr. Lord whether, in referring to the proportions of tin and gold, he means them to be considered by weight? "Dr. Lord. No, not by weight, but by the width of the strip of tin and the width of the strip of gold. I get the proportions in that way, then "Dr. Howe. Will Dr. Lord tell us whether he refers to the same numbers of gold foil and tin foil; as, for instance, No. 4 gold and No. 4 tin? "Dr. Lord. I use the No. 5 gold, and tin, I think, of about the same number, but I always use No. 5 gold, both cohesive and non-cohesive."—New York Odontological Society Proceedings, 1893, page 103. "Tin and gold, in the proportions generally used, do not present a pleasing color; when finished, it looks but little better than tin, and after a short time it grows dark, and sometimes black. I use five parts of gold to one of tin, prepared as follows: Lay down one sheet of Abbey's non-cohesive gold foil, No. 6; upon this place a sheet of No. 4; upon this place a sheet of White's globe tin foil, No. 4; upon this another sheet of Abbey's non-cohesive gold, No. 4; upon this a sheet of No. 6. Cut into five strips and crimp; the crimped strips are cut into pieces a little longer than the depth of the cavity to be filled; some of the strips are rolled into cylinders, others are left open, because easier to use in starting a filling. The color of this combination is slightly less yellow than pure gold, and hardens just as rapidly as when the proportions are one to one, Dr. T. D. Shumway says, "To have a scientific method of treatment, there certainly must be a recognition of what is known of the nature of tooth-structure. The method adopted more than a quarter of a century ago, and which is at present employed, does not accord with the teachings of "In the interglobular spaces there is a substance which is called amorphous or structureless, and a filling to be in harmony with this substance should be amorphous or structureless in its composition. The only materials we have which meet these conditions are gutta-percha and tin. It is its structureless character that gives to tin its value. Coming in contact with the living dentin, it is easily adapted, and does not excite inflammation; it does not interfere with the process going on within the teeth to heal the lesion caused by caries. A wound from a bullet made of tin, unless it struck a vital part, nature would heal, even if the cause of the wound was not removed, by encysting the ball. This process of nature of repairing injury by encysting "Gold will unite with tin under certain conditions so as to form apparently a solid mass. By a combination of these metals, not by interlacing or incorporating one in the other, but by affinity, secured by simple contact, we have all the preservative qualities of tin combined with the indestructible properties of gold. For the base of the filling we have a material in harmony with tooth-substance, introduced in a way that is in accord with the law that governs all living bodies, and for the outside a crystalline substance that corresponds to the covering of the teeth. This covering of gold is a perfect shield to the base, and the field for the display of artistic skill in restoring "After excavating, the cavity is treated with absolute alcohol, as cleanliness and thorough dryness are absolutely essential. "The tin is put in with steel pluggers, after the method of wedging; it must be thoroughly condensed, so as to leave a smooth surface, and enough used to come up to where the enamel and dentin join. "The effect is not produced by incorporating or interlacing the gold with the tin; we rely upon the affinity of the two metals to retain the gold; no undercuts, angles, or pits are made in the tin, dentin, or enamel. The gold, extra cohesive from No. 4 to 40, is made to adhere to the tin by simple contact, without pressure or force; the union is not mechanical. "The instruments used for filling the remainder of the cavity with gold are Shumway's ivory points, which adapt the gold nicely to the margin. "The set consists of five and were patented in 1881, and have been used by me since that time for manipulating cohesive gold. One 'point' is for proximal cavities in the anterior teeth; three 'points' of different sizes are for occlusal cavities; one 'point' for proximal cavities in bicuspids and molars and labial and buccal cavities; the sides, edges, and ends of the 'points' are used, as the purpose is simply to obtain contact. "The 'point' shown full size in Fig. 8 is of more general application than any of the others, and is "The metal pin in the end of the handle is for picking up and carrying the gold." Tin has been used successfully for completely lining cavities, filling the remainder with gold; it is also useful for repairing gold fillings. Two or three thicknesses of tin foil may be pressed into a cavity with a rubber point or hard piece of spunk, allowing it to come well out to the margin; filling the rest with amalgam. "As a lining it presents to dentin an amalgam of tin and mercury which does not discolor the dentin like ordinary amalgam, and helps do away with local currents on the filling, which is one cause of amalgam shrinkage in the mouth." (Dr. S. B. Palmer.) When caries extends to the bifurcation of roots, make a mat of two or three layers of tin, place it in the bifurcation and use it as a base in filling the rest of the cavity with amalgam. Tin is second in importance in alloys for amalgam, as it increases plasticity, prevents discoloration, It will be noticed that when cavities are lined with tin foil, it only constitutes a small part of the filling, and that it has not been melted with the other metals in the alloy before being amalgamated. A thick mat of tin has been recommended as a partial non-conductor under amalgam fillings. Plastic tin can be made by pouring mercury into melted tin, or by mixing the fillings with mercury at ordinary temperatures; it has a whitish color, and if there is not too much mercury it occurs in the form of a brittle granular mass of cubical crystals. Generally amalgams of tin and mercury do not harden sufficiently, but forty-eight parts of mercury and one hundred of tin make a fairly good filling, said to have a therapeutical value; it should not be washed or squeezed before using, and "is not a chemical combination." "Tin unites with mercury in atomic proportions, forming a weak crystalline compound." (Dr. E. C. Kirk.) Mercury and tin readily unite as an amalgam under ordinary circumstances, and form a definite chemical compound having the formula Sn2Hg. (Hodgen.) Another preparation of tin is known as stannous gold; it is manufactured in heavy sheets and used the same as cohesive gold foil, and can be easily manipulated, for it is rather plastic. Crystal tin for taking the place of tin foil: "Take chemically pure hydrochloric acid and dissolve tin foil in it until a saturated solution is obtained; this may be done speedily by heating the acid to a boiling point, or the same thing can be accomplished in a few hours with the acid cold; it is then chlorid of tin. It is then poured into a clean vessel and an equal quantity of distilled water added; then a clean strip of zinc is plunged into the solution, and tin crystals are deposited on the zinc; when there is sufficient thickness on the zinc, remove both, and slip the crystals off from the zinc into pure water, clean the zinc thoroughly, and reinsert for another coating. The character of the crystallization will be modified by the extent of the dilution of the solution in the first place. Wash the tin in pure water until all traces of the acid are removed, or a few drops of ammonia can be added to neutralize the acid. It was suggested that it would be desirable to have some acid remain in the tin for filling teeth in which there is no sensitive dentin. We have put in a few fillings, and it works beautifully, and makes firmer fillings than foil. It For some years it was considered the best practice to enlarge all root-canals and fill them with gold; in many of these cases the crown cavities were filled with tin. Tin has been used for filling root-canals, but should there happen to be any leakage through the foramen or tooth-structure, the tin will discolor, and there may be infiltration into the crown, thus causing discoloration, which might be objectionable if the crown was filled with gold. Chloro-percha, gutta-percha, and oxychlorid of zinc are much better for this purpose. The apical quarter of a canal has been filled with tin, and the remainder with cement. Tin can be used for filling root-canals. Roll on a broach small triangular pieces of the foil into very small cone-shaped cylinders, carry to place, then withdraw the broach, and force in the cylinder with the same or a larger broach; sometimes it is necessary to use another broach, to push the cylinder off from the one on which it is rolled. Another method is to carry and pack into the canal by means of a broach, very narrow strips of No. 10 or 20 foil; or "About four years ago I concluded to try tin for filling root-canals; then I began to look for patients whose general health was good, who had strong, hardy-looking teeth, and kept their mouths in good condition. I found one who answered all my requirements, with a molar to be filled, and they would not have it filled with gold, or could not, on account of the expense. I filled the canals with tin and the crown with amalgam. After filling thirty-eight molars in this way I stopped for developments. In six or seven weeks a lady returned with an inferior molar abscessed, but at the time it was filled the circumstances were such that it could not be properly treated. In nine months a gentleman for whom I had filled four molars returned with an inferior one abscessed. This is the sum-total of abscessed teeth where tin was used in the root-canals, at the end of four years. The others are in good condition, as I have seen them every six months. The roots were treated from four to six weeks with carbolic acid before filling." (Dr. A. W. Harlan, Missouri Dental Journal, 1872.) "Tin foil is just as good as gold for filling root-canals, as it is entirely innocuous and sufficiently Shavings turned from a disk of pure tin have been used in combination with Watts's sponge gold for filling teeth, either by making a portion of the filling from each metal or using them indiscriminately. A mat of tin foil dipped in chloro-percha can be used to cap an exposed pulp, or a concave tin disk can be used for the same purpose. A mat of tin has been used over a slight exposure of the pulp, because of its slight conduction of heat and cold, thus avoiding much thermal irritation and stimulating recuperation. Some use Robinson's fibrous material as a surface for tin fillings, thinking that it is harder and will wear longer because of the erroneous notion that it has platinum in it. |