It used to be considered preferable to remove all carious tissues with any signs of disease, regardless of the consequences, even at the expense of the hard tissue, causing stress to, or exposing, the dental pulp. However, it is now understood that this is not only unnecessary but also undesirable. Bacteria can be sealed under restorations, depriving them of nutrition and inactivating them.In asymptomatic, vital teeth with deep lesions, strategies for conservative carious tissue removal which reduce tissue loss and pulp exposure risk have to be balanced against removing adequate tissue to maximize restoration longevity. The criterion used to guide carious dentin tissue removal is hardness, judged by tactile feedback during examination. The ...