The most obvious concern with tooth loss is the appearance of your smile afterward. Even losing a single tooth can have a dramatic impact on your smile, and that effect is more prominent if you’ve lost more than one. However, your smile’s appearance is only the most immediate concern. More severe ones include the impact the empty spaces can have on your remaining healthy teeth, and the effects that missing teeth roots can have on your jawbone and oral structures. To fully restore your smile, your choice in replacement teeth should successfully address all of these concerns as well as restore confidence your smile’s appearance.
A conventional dental bridge or denture can help your smile recover from tooth loss by addressing most of the concerns. For instance, the right custom prosthesis can replace your missing teeth with highly lifelike replicas, improving your smile and restoring the support your remaining teeth rely on. Replacing lost teeth also reestablishes your bite function and ability to process foods and enunciate your words properly. However, despite their realism, conventional bridges and dentures cannot address the consequences of missing teeth roots. Instead, they rely on solutions such as abutment teeth and adhesives for support.
Dental implants are designed to mimic the functions of lost teeth roots to help prevent the consequences that tooth loss can have on your jawbone and oral structures. Implant posts are strategically inserted to withstand the highest levels of bite pressure, and to allow a custom-made prosthesis to be secured to them via abutments. They give your replacement crown, bridge, or denture the ability to stimulate your jawbone every time you bite and chew, which helps it maintain a steady supply of vital minerals and nutrients.
Dental implants give dental prostheses the advantage of having anchored posts similar to your healthy, natural teeth roots. For more information about the significant difference dental implants can make for your smile, schedule a consultation with Dr. Kania by calling her periodontal office in Encinitas/San Diego, CA, at (760) 642-0711.
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