Dental Implants FAQs
No, not just anyone with missing teeth can have the gaps filled with implants. Patients need to be in reasonably good health, and it should be borne in mind that smoking cigarettes can impeded the healing process of the implant.
It is also important that the rest of the patients teeth are in good condition and free from decay or disease. If there any existing conditions, these will have to be treated before the implant can take place.
The placing of an implant also relies upon there being sufficient bone in the jaw to hold it. Your implant surgeon will check on this using a CT scan and, in the event of bone density being too low, a graft can be performed.
The usual alternatives to dental implants are bridges and dentures. Fitting a bridge involves attaching false teeth to the patients existing teeth. For this to work, the existing teeth have to be filed down, a procedure which can have implications for their future well being.
In the case of dentures, teeth which are attached to a metal or plastic plate are placed in the mouth and taken out each day. Dentures are frequently cumbersome and uncomfortable, and can limit the food which the patient is able to eat.
Dental implants are a permanent replacement for missing teeth which, in some ways, are even better than the real thing. As well as providing an aesthetic solution, dental implants solve the problem of bone loss in the jaw, something which the alternatives don’t address.
