Abstract
When opposing teeth with amalgam and gold restoration are in contact, current flows in the mouth at the instant the dissimilar metals touch. In this study, this condition was simulated by use of resistors and extracted human teeth with amalgam and MOD gold inlay restorations.
When both teeth were in contact in a physiological saline solution, we measured current and electrical potential generated in each pulp chamber. Galvanic current generated in the tooth with amalgam was always larger (as much as 18.2 times at the instant of contact) than that in the tooth with gold. Electrical potential generated in the tooth with amalgam was always larger (as much as 9.7 times at the instant of contact) than that in the tooth with gold. It should be emphasized that the larger current generated in the tooth with amalgam was caused mainly by its larger electrical potential. These results correspond well with the clinical phenomenon of galvanic pain, which occurs in the tooth with amalgam rather than in the tooth with gold.
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