Instruments
Small instruments for caries removal:
Files, small saws, probes, rasps, scrapers, excavators,
enamel chisels, etc.
Traduction par Malcolm Bishop (Grande Bretagne)
Up to the beginning of the 20th
century, the decision as to whether to restore a tooth
or not was not an easy one to make. The main reason for
this was the difficulty of obtaining a clear view of the
inside of the mouth, even in full daylight. Several
authors commented on, and regretted, the shadows thrown
by the hands on the teeth. Moreover, the probes and
diagnostic instruments did not progress much during the
18th century, not really becoming fully functional until
during the 19th century, when the probes became finer,
and at the same time the mouth mirrors introduced at the
beginning of that century no longer resembled miniature
hand mirrors.
Following the identification of the
tooth that was carious and responsible for giving pain,
files were for a long time all that were available to
enlarge the cavity before rasps ( ‘rugines’)
could be brought into play. These files improved access
to caries situated at contact points, albeit at the
expense of healthy enamel, and also separated the teeth,
simultaneously removing or at least reducing the sharp
edges which might injure the lips or the tongue. Their
employment was often controversial. It should be noted
that in the first half of the 20th century, despite the
improvements brought in by rotary instruments, the
catalogues still offered patterns of files, even if more
and more complex in design, for the separation of teeth
or smoothing roughness.
The scrapers or rasps, in reality
multi-functional instruments, could also be used for
smoothing the teeth. But from the second half of the
19th century, improvements in the manufacture and
quality of steel allowed for the making of enamel
chisels and of excavators, much better suited to the
opening up of cavities and the removal of caries. These
instruments were used throughout the 20th century.
We have found that from the 18th
century some authors suggested using drill bits or even
reamers adopted directly from the workshops of jewellers
or ironmongers, to function as little trephines to gain
the best access, via a carious cavity, to the pulp
chamber and root canals. It was necessary to give these
instruments a to-and-fro motion and/or a rotary
movement, using the thumb and forefinger, foreshadowing
the actions required by the hand drills that were to
come. Meanwhile, mechanisation generated fully
rotational systems.
It would appear that the early types
of instruments which were common to other fields of work
are not very numerous in dental museums. Perhaps they
finished their lives in a general toolbox?
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