Background: Dental chair lights can rapidly polymerize light-reactive composites beyond the point of workability, preventing adequate time for the shaping and sculpting of large direct composite restorations.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine whether yellow plastic food wrap placed over a dental chair light would perceptibly retard the polymerization rate of a light-cured composite (Esthet-X, shade A1, Dentsply/Caulk, Milford, DE, USA).
Materials And Methods: Zero, one, and two thicknesses of yellow plastic food wrap (Reynolds Metals Company, Richmond, VA, USA) were, in turn, used in the following scenarios: (1) placed in a spectrophotometer and compared for percentage transmission of 470 nm light; (2) placed over a curing unit light wand and compared for milliwatts of output on a radiometer; (3) placed over a dental chair light positioned 64 cm from 0.