For a Lifetime of Great Oral Health
Prevention is the key to great oral health. Better diet, medical care, and other factors are allowing us to live longer lives. Unfortunately, our teeth have not adapted to our long life span and need help to last as long as we do. If you want to have your teeth for your whole life, here is what you do:
- Brush, floss, and use recommended dental aids correctly, at least once a day. Use fluoride-containing mouth rinse daily.
- Come to the office for the recare hygiene appointments at the intervals we recommend. Let us provide a prescription-strength topical fluoride treatment at every recare appointment.
- Let us take radiographs when we believe they are necessary.
- Teeth age at wear, just like the rest of your body. The outer covering of hard enamel can get thin, break off, or wear through and expose the softer dentin. Dentin erodes very quickly. When we see exposed dentin, let us get it covered and protected.
- Have sealants places on all teeth that can benefit from them.
- Don’t ask to “patch” anything. Patchwork dentistry is contrary to the concept of keeping your teeth trouble-free for a lifetime. If small repairs are possible and appropriate, we will tell you.
- Choose the procedure or restorative material that will last you the longest. All dental materials have a life expectancy, after which time they fail and must be replaced. Each time a tooth is redrilled, it gets weaker. Only solid, yellow gold could last for your entire life. Tooth-colored ceramics and porcelain may last as long. It is your choice.
- Bonded restorations (current state-of-the-art) require less drilling than silver fillings. Less drilling is good. The tooth retains more strength and the restoration lasts longer. Let us do the good stuff.
- Gum disease can start at any time. Genetics, diet, oral self-care, medications, and general health can all have an influence. Gum disease is both site-specific (most often starts in a localized area) and episodic (can begin at any time). It is also painless in its early stages. We will tell you as soon as we spot gum disease. It will need to be treated properly and immediately.
- Our treatment recommendations are always based on your needs, not on what your insurance company wants or its bottom line. There are dozens of common dental procedures that are not part of benefit packages. Dental insurance carriers are in business to make money. They want to pay out as little as possible as late as possible. An attitude of “If my insurance company doesn’t pay for it, I don’t want it,” only hurts you and YOUR oral health.
- We have listened to what you want, examined your mouth, and know your dental needs. Most patients can have all the best dentistry they want and deserve. It just takes a little planning. We can help with that, too. If you want all of your teeth, all of your life, follow the above recommendations and do it right the first time.
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