Dentistry articles: cosmetic, restorative dentistry

February 24, 2009

The Dental Implant Procedure

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 10:16 am

Consultation: To begin the dental implant process, you will receive a consultation from an implant specialist. Your general dentist may not be the person to perform this consultation. Be sure to ask whether or not they have experience in this process. There are some dentists that perform the entire procedure including surgery. While it may seem easier to go to a “one-stop-shop” dentist who does it all him or herself but this is not advisable unless you have thoroughly vetted their professional experience with not only dentistry but also the oral surgery component necessary to perform a successful implant.

Preparation of the Implant Site - Tooth Extraction and Bone Grafting: The ultimate success of a dental implant depends in large part on the health of the patient and their jawbone prior to placement of the dental implant posts. A sufficient amount of healthy bone is needed for the implant post to fully integrate into the jawbone. Some patients, specifically those who have been missing teeth for many years, may not have enough healthy bone to support an implant. In such cases an experienced professional can perform a bone grafting procedure to build up the bone at the implant site. During this procedure, he will take healthy bone from another part of the body and place it into the jawbone. If taking bone from another part of the body is not an option, some other options include using cadaver bone or bovine bone. Dependent upon your particular case, it may also be necessary to extract an existing non-performing, rotted or otherwise compromised tooth or teeth to make room for the implants.

Placement of Dental Implants and the Replacement Teeth: Once prepared, an incision in the gum will be made and the implant will be surgically implanted into the jawbone. The oral surgery is usually a quick and relatively painless procedure. It is done under a local anesthetic. It will usually take several months for the jawbone and gum to fully heal while your living bone fuses with the implant, a process called osseointegration. Once healing is complete, you will return to your general or cosmetic dentist to have a natural-looking replacement tooth affixed on the implant post.

After the entire dental implant procedure is completed you should be the beneficiary of a permanent tooth or teeth. The longevity of the implant prosthetic will vary dependent upon many factors, including age, general health, oral health and how you care for your teeth.

This article is written by Chris Kalian, contributing consultant to Dental Implant Price Guide. Mr. Kalian has over 10 years of Implant experience, and questions can be directed to Dental Insurance.

February 15, 2009

A Few Secrets About Teeth Whitening

Filed under: Teeth Whitening — Tags: — admin @ 10:59 am

Within the last 10 years the ground of teeth whitening, both in the

dental office and at home, has changed immensely. Essentially, there are two different methods to get whiter teeth: dental (in-aid) whitening, and an at home treatment. Discover a few secrets about teeth whitening that your dentist hopes I’ll never tell you!

METHOD #1: DENTAL (IN-Thing) TEETH WHITENING

I can tell you from first-hand experience, dentists LOVE the patient who wants to have a teeth whitening moving in the dental office. Back in the early ’90’s there was only one option available.

Your dentist would make molds of your teeth, send them off to a lab, and in 5-10 days away with back your custom fitted teeth whitening mouthpiece. Then you would sit in the dental chair for 1-2 hours, with these plastic teeth whitening molds filled with peroxide (at a very low concentration) pressed against your teeth and gums.

After 3-4 visits, your teeth would be officially declared whiter (and mostly they were), and you would be sent home with a nice $500 - $1,000 bill to pay. And with whiter teeth of course.

I’ll be the first to admit, dental division teeth whitening has come a long way in the past 10 years. Now the most popular teeth whitening dental advocacy procedure known as Laser Bleaching (or Power Bleaching, Argon Bleaching, etc.) is a shorter process. Basically this teeth whitening advance consists of the application of a concentrated peroxide gel onto your teeth, then for the next hour you sit in a dental chair with your mouth wide liberal, while a special light (usually argon) is shined onto the teeth whitening paste that in turn chemically reacts with the peroxide to thorough the teeth whitening process in as short a time period as possible.

This teeth whitening box office does work. Although, many dentists say that you get a whiter smile by repeated tray applications because the teeth whitening peroxide stays in correspond with with your teeth for longer periods of time. The downside is that you still get stuck with that fat $500 - $1,000 bill (at least for the good teeth whitening resume).And you still need to either come back 6 months later for another teeth whitening (excuse me - a touch up!), or you’re given some take relaxed whitening items. Why then did you spend $500 - $1,000 dollars for an in-office teeth whitening procedure?

Fortunately, as most other things in existence, technology stepped in to make teeth whitening easier and more affordable!

METHOD #2: Competent in TEETH WHITENING

I’ll say this once just to get it out in the open, it’s now possible (in almost all cases) to achieve “dental office” standing teeth whitening, from the comfort of your own home! “At-Home” teeth whitening has taken a bite out of (pathetic for the pun) the “in-office” power bleaching systems, where millions of corporate advertising dollars now compete with the comfort of teeth whitening at homewards.

And rightly so…

Up until a few years ago, teeth whitening was a fairly complex process. The hard part was making those bespoke mouthpieces for each patient, for this reason alone, home teeth whitening was not an option for most people.

ESSENTIALLY, THERE ARE 3 Several HOME TEETH WHITENING OPTIONS AVAILABLE

TEETH WHITENTING OPTION #1 - Nail-brush-ON WHITENING

Brush-on teeth whitening in principal is a great concept, just brush on the instructions, allow it to dry on your teeth, and let is stay on your teeth overnight. Sounds simple, right?

In reality, dust-broom-on teeth whitening is designed for the segment of the public that is in love with shortcuts (in other words, for those people who don’t want to splash out the time to do it right the first time). Brush-on teeth whitening has TWO MAIN FLAWS:

1. When you brush on the teeth whitening way, it relies on the premise that it will dry on your teeth. This is great in principle, but if you get the teeth whitening formula wet (i.e. from saliva or from licking your teeth) then it becomes Genuinely easy to rub off parts of the formula. And guess what happens if you rub off only part of the teeth whitening formula? You got it - you don’t get an even whitening result! It turns out patchy and blotchy.

2. The right hand flaw with most brush-on teeth whitening as I see it, is the ingredients. If you look at the ingredient list of the leading brush-on whitener, you’ll see the first ingredient is rot-gut. If you’ve read my ebook “The Bad Breath Bible” (http://www.TheraBreath.com/web/art/l/badbreath.asp) then you already know that alcohol is awesome for your breath! Actually, I’m sure the reason why they’ve added alcohol to their teeth whitening formula is because it’s needed as a desiccant (something that dries out the method so that it supposedly stays on your teeth at night). However, that still doesn’t diminish the effect it can have on your gums and your breath. Also, most of these brush-on teeth whitening formulas restrain glycerin which literally sucks the moisture out from the enamel of your teeth and it’s the primary cause of most tooth sensitivity from teeth whitening.

TEETH WHITENING Election #2 - STRIPS YOU STICK ON YOUR TEETH

The second most common type of home teeth whitening is using whitening strips. The out-and-out lure of this home teeth whitening option is the strips’ simplicity of use, they’re easy to apply and no preparation is certain. Again, everybody loves shortcuts, right? Unfortunately, once again that’s exactly the type of teeth whitening you end up getting! Let me spell out…

Strips that stick on your teeth usually consist of an upper strip and a lower strip each pressed against the outer fa of your teeth. Now think about this for a second…Are your teeth completely flat? Of course not - they have recesses and grooves, particularly between each tooth. Well think of you’re painting a fence, and you just slapped paint on the outside, without taking the time to paint in the grooves between each knuckle-headed board. That fence would look pretty funny wouldn’t it? Nicely painted on the outside, but in the grooves between each colourless board, still dark and dingy, with all of the old paint showing.

When you use teeth whitening strips, the same thing can conclusively happen to your teeth if you’re not careful. The whiter your teeth become, the more pronounced those dingy cracks seem! Eventually it can end up looking like you have foolish gaps between your teeth. Definitely not the desired result!

TEETH WHITENING OPTION #3 - TRAYS WITH BLEACHING GELSIn the mainTrays with bleaching gels still provide the best combination of the most affordable and most efficient teeth whitening to hand. Since I’m a dentist, I can let you in on a few little secrets (some secrets which most dentists would shoot me for telling you since it costs them thousands in lost profits)!

First, most of the teeth whitening gels available at your dentist are exactly the same. There is very little difference from one dentist to another, that’s because the gels are formulated by a foolish number of manufacturers.

Second, most of the teeth whitening gels available at retail stores are of very down quality. They’ve been sitting in a warehouse or on a truck for who knows how long, and because they are designed to be “low cost” they have very low concentrations of active ingredients. Older teeth whitening gels use a concentration of only 16% of carbamide peroxide.

Third, the one trend in common between dental office and “store” teeth whitening gels is that they both use glycerin as a carrying agent. Now there is nothing inappropriate with glycerin by itself. It is not dangerous in any way. However, when mixed with carbamide peroxide, the glycerin is used to draw water out of the enamel in hierarchy to speed up the whitening process. This is what causes the most common side effect of teeth whitening - sensitive teeth! Therefore, you’re thriving to want to find a teeth whitening product that does not use a glycerin base.

ARMED WITH THIS NEW TEETH WHITENING Awareness, NOW WHAT SHOULD YOU DO?

There are four key components I recommend for making sure you get the best possible teeth whitening results every interval.

1. Immediately before whitening, brush your teeth for two minutes with an oxygenating toothpaste combined with the finest appropriate polishing agents AND aloe vera to strengthen your gums and prevent any sensitivity. This way you’re sure that the whitening gel undeviatingly contacts your tooth enamel (instead of dental plaque).

2. Use form-fitting mouth trays that are tailor-made to your specific bite. Make sure they fit snugly around each tooth, and at all points they press firmly around the sides of your teeth and gums. The foremost home teeth whitening systems use a moldable tray system that contains mouthpieces which you can actually fit to your mouth. You mold them by waterlogged them for a few seconds in warm water, then you press the plastic up (or down) against your teeth and gums. When the plastic cools you have a nice quiet plastic mouthpiece that is fitted to the curves of your particular smile.

3. You should use as strong of teeth whitening gel as reasonable to ensure that the time your teeth are in contact with the whitening gel is well spent. Use a 21% carbamide peroxide concentrated teeth whitening gel that is formulated specifically to depreciate the sensitivity to your teeth and gums, (in other words - NO glycerin!). This percentage of concentration also means a whiter fruit in a shorter period of time. Finally, a flavored teeth whitening gel helps - why not make the experience as agreeable as possible? No need for it to taste bad!

4. Immediately after your teeth whitening treatment, enhance the effect by using an oxygenating enunciated rinse. Remember, make sure not to use a mouthwash that contains alcohol, as this can actually chemically curtail the bleaching effectiveness, not to mention it dries your mouth out!

I recommend following this teeth whitening system for 5 days in a row. You can even do the top and bottom arch alone for comfort if you prefer. After that…you’ll have a noticeably whiter smile - GUARANTEED!

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