ALIEN VS. PREDATOR

A.K.A. BRIDGE VS. IMPLANT

OH, SNAP!..SO YOU LOST THAT TOOTH.

It doesn’t help that it was one of the front ones.  The most common ways to replace a missing tooth include both the Dental Bridge and the Dental Implant.  Below are the pros and cons of each.

THE DENTAL BRIDGE

The tooth supported bridge uses the 2 surrounding teeth (abutments) to support a 3 crown piece with a fake tooth in the middle (the pontic).

The Pros

The Cons

• Finished 2-4 weeks after extraction • Cannot floss between                                      
• Fixes surrounding teeth if fractured • Alters the surrounding teeth that may be healthy
• Nonsurgical • Abutments may need root canals
• Can disguise ridge abnormalities • Teeth may look too large if prior teeth had natural spaces
• Less expensive than implant therapy • If and abutment tooth is lost so is the bridge
• Permanently cemented • Must have teeth on each side of the missing tooth

THE DENTAL IMPLANT

A fixture is placed into the bone and a crown is then built on top of the implant.

The Pros

The Cons

• Replaces single tooth and root • Does not address condition of surrounding teeth
• Surgery is generally painless • Depends on healing and on the patient’s health risks
• Can floss regularly • Requires a certain x-ray
• Tooth appears to be coming right out of the gum • Cannot hide extensive bone loss and bony defects
• Can absorb biting foces • Cost for implant is separate from the cost of restoration
• If cared for, should last a lifetime • Can be lost to periimplantitis
• Don’t have to be numb for restoring • Treatment time is about six months

 

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