Knowledge catalog
TreatmentK00.3dentistry

Dental Fluorosis — Treatment

Enamel hypomineralization from excessive fluoride ingestion during tooth development

Treatment

Mild Fluorosis

Microabrasion and bleaching

  • Enamel microabrasion: mixture of hydrochloric acid (18%) and pumice applied to remove superficial opacities — removes 25-300 μm of enamel
  • In-office or home bleaching with hydrogen peroxide or carbamide peroxide — lightens intrinsic brown staining
  • Combination: microabrasion followed by bleaching is highly effective for mild-to-moderate cases
  • Resin infiltration (ICON): low-viscosity resin fills enamel pores, reducing white opacity — particularly for mild lesions

Moderate Fluorosis

Composite resin bonding

  • Microabrasion first to remove surface staining
  • Direct composite resin veneer — bonded resin covers the discolored enamel
  • Good results as fluorotic enamel bonds adequately to resin (though etching patterns differ)
  • Bleaching followed by composite for optimal color match

Severe Fluorosis

Porcelain veneers or crowns

  • Porcelain laminate veneers for anterior teeth — conservative preparation to cover pitted and stained surfaces
  • Full-coverage porcelain-fused-to-metal or all-ceramic crown for severely compromised teeth
  • Delay major restorations until late adolescence (18+) when tooth development is complete and gingival margins are stable
  • Monitor for functional issues in children and manage conservatively until adulthood