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Excerpt from The International Dental Journal, 1898, Vol. 19: A Monthly Periodical Devoted to Dental and Oral Science
The patient was visiting my office nearly every day for the week following, having a partial bridge denture inserted, which gave me an opportunity to watch the swelling disappear and the tis sues return to a normal color and condition. At the close of her stay in this city she called, as I had requested, to have the tooth filled. I removed the dressing, dried the canals thoroughly with warm air, and closed the apical ends with a small point of gutta percha; then filled the roots with oxychloride of zinc, and closed the crown cavity with an alloy filling and dismissed the case. Now we have the most interesting and important part of the matter. After an absence of two years the patient again called upon me for services, and reported that this tooth had not given her a moment's uneasiness during her absence, and had been quite as useful as any other of the similar organs.
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