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The Hall Technique 10 years on

Innes, N. P. T. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9984-0012, Evans, D. J. P., Bonifacio, C. C., Geneser, M., Hesse, D., Heimer, M., Kanellis, M., Machiulskiene, V., Narbutaite, J., Olegario, I. C., Owais, A., Araujo, M. P., Raggio, D. P., Splieth, C., Van Amerongen, E., Weber-Gasparoni, K. and Santamaria, R. M. 2017. The Hall Technique 10 years on. British Dental Journal 222 (6) , 478--483. 10.1038/sj.bdj.2017.273

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Abstract

<p>It is ten years since the first paper on the Hall Technique was published in the British Dental Journal and almost 20 years since the technique first came to notice. Dr Norna Hall a (now retired) general dental practitioner from the north of Scotland had, for many years, been managing carious primary molar teeth by cementing preformed metal crowns over them, with no local anaesthesia, tooth preparation or carious tissue removal. This first report, a retrospective analysis of Dr Hall's treatments, caused controversy. How could simply sealing a carious lesion, with all the associated bacteria and decayed tissues, possibly be clinically successful? Since then, growing understanding that caries is essentially a biofilm driven disease rather than an infectious disease, explains why the Hall Technique, and other 'sealing in' carious lesion techniques, are successful. The intervening ten years has seen robust evidence from several randomised control trials that are either completed or underway. These have found the Hall Technique superior to comparator treatments, with success rates (no pain or infection) of 99% (UK study) and 100% (Germany) at one year, 98% and 93% over two years (UK and Germany) and 97% over five years (UK). The Hall Technique is now regarded as one of several biological management options for carious lesions in primary molars. This paper covers commonly asked questions about the Hall Technique and speculates on what lies ahead.</p>

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Dentistry
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
ISSN: 0007-0610
Last Modified: 07 Nov 2022 11:05
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/134460

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