Taking care of your teeth today, means a healthier happier smile tomorrow.
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General Dentistry
Taking care of your teeth means more than brushing and flossing. For complete care, it’s important to visit a dentist every six months for a regular check-up and professional cleaning.
The first step in this process is to find a dentist with whom you feel comfortable, and then schedule an appointment. Most dental visits are check-ups. Regular check-ups (ideally every six months) and professional cleaning will help your teeth and gums stay cleaner, last longer and can prevent painful problems from developing.
General dentistry also includes X-rays and fillings.
Implants
A dental implant is a titanium post (like a tooth root) that is surgically positioned into the jawbone beneath the gum line that allows your dentist to mount replacement teeth or bridge into that area. An implant doesn’t come loose like a denture can.
Dental implants also benefit general oral health because they do not have to be anchored to other teeth, like bridges.
Crowns & Bridges
Bridges and crowns are fixed prosthetic devices that are cemented onto existing teeth or implants by a dentist or prosthodontist. Crowns are used most commonly to entirely cover or “cap” a damaged tooth or cover an implant. Bridges are commonly used to cover a space if you’re missing one or more teeth. They are cemented to natural teeth or implants surrounding the space where the tooth once stood.
In addition to strengthening a damaged tooth, bridges and crowns can be used to improve a tooth’s appearance, shape, alignment and dental occlusion (bite). Gaps left by missing teeth can cause the remaining teeth to shift, which can result in a bad bite. Bridges and crowns help prevent this from happening.
Veneers
Dental veneers are thin shells of porcelain or composite resin that are custom made to fit over teeth, providing a natural, attractive look. They can be used to fix chipped, stained, misaligned, worn down, uneven or abnormally spaced teeth.
The two most common materials used in dental veneers are composite resin and porcelain. Both types of veneers can be fabricated by a dental technician in a laboratory and are bonded to the patient’s teeth in a dentist’s office. Dental veneers are bonded to the teeth with resin cement.
Porcelain material is brittle; however, when it is firmly bonded to the tooth it can become very strong and durable.
Tongue Ties
Tongue-tie (ankyloglossia) is a condition in which the thin piece of skin under the baby’s tongue, (the lingual frenulum), is abnormally short and may restrict the movement of the tongue. Sometimes tongue-tie causes no problems at all and requires no action.
Indications that a baby may have a significant tongue-tie include:
- Nipple pain and damage
- A misshapen nipple after breastfeeding
- The baby often loses suction whilst feeding and sucks in air
- The baby fails to gain weight
- Tongue cannot protrude beyond the baby’s lips
- Tongue cannot be moved sideways
- Tongue tip may be notched or heart shaped
- When the tongue is extended, the tongue tip may look flat or square instead of pointed.
Root Canals
In simple terms, root canal treatment is used as a way to save a tooth that is labelled as ‘dead’.
Root canal treatment, or endodontic treatment, is the procedure involving the removal of infected or dead pulp from your tooth root canal area (The area inside of the hard part of your tooth).
Once this matter is removed the cavity is filled with a permanent filling, and possibly restored with a crown. Your tooth has now been saved.
If root canal work is avoided and the situation worsens, the infection will become more severe and eventually lead to an abscess (A collection of pus that causes a bacterial infection and can spread to surrounding tissue with ease).
Bruxism
Bruxism is also known as grinding and/or clenching of your teeth. It’s a very common condition that affects some of the population from time to time, with approximately 5% being regular, forceful grinders.
If you notice any of the following symptoms, you may be experiencing bruxism:
- Rhythmic contractions of the jaw muscles
- A grinding sound at night, which may disturb the sleep of someone who you share a room with
- Jaw muscles that are tight or painful
- Popping or clicking of the temporomandibular joint
- Long-lasting pain in the face
- Damaged teeth, broken dental fillings and injured gums
- Headache
- Swelling (occasionally) on the side of your lower jaw caused by clenching.