Your Questions, Answered Get Informed About the Latest Advances in Dental Care
If you've got questions about dental care, you're not alone. Here are just a few of the more common questions we receive from patients about our care. Don't see your question on this list? Get in touch with us, and we'd be happy to answer any question you can come up with!
To put it simply, yes! Like any other part of the body, the mouth is connected by tissues, bones, ligaments, and blood vessels that interact with the rest of the body. What happens in the mouth doesn't stay there, and what happens in the body can likewise affect the mouth.
Oral health can have an enormous impact on conditions like heart disease, diabetes, strokes, Alzheimer's disease, respiratory disease, cancer, and pregnancy complications—to name a few. That's why it's so important to have good oral hygiene and lifestyle habits. It's not just about keeping your teeth white—it's about helping you live a healthier, happier life!
Dental care is and has always been seen as a discretionary health dollar. Many expenses in our budgets often seem to take a higher priority. For example, Christmas, summer vacations, boat and 2nd car payments, dining out, etc., all conspire to beat out dentistry as a budgeted priority. In this regard, it is fundamentally a priorities game.
Dental insurance is a help for some people, but even there, this pre-paid dental support lacks the power to help accomplish significant amounts of dentistry. Thankfully, we now have the ability to use alternative methods of financing which allows people to receive necessary treatment and to spread out the payments in a comfortable manner. We do the same for our cars, boats, vacations, and often Christmas. Why not our health?
Our new Preventative Care Wellness Program was designed specifically to help those without dental insurance afford preventative care more easily. For a low monthly fee, you get all your preventive care, one emergency visit per year, plus steep discounts on treatments.
When a tooth is drilled and a silver amalgam filling is placed into a tooth, the structural integrity of the tooth is compromised. Just like when water freezes in a pipe, when the silver mercury filling begins to expand, the increasing structural stresses must be relieved. Cracks appear and happen in tooth structure to relieve the increasing stress. As these cracks propagate through tooth structure, pieces of the tooth can break away. When this happens, it carries a certain risk of injuring the nerve or breaking below the gum line. Sometimes in order to save the tooth it is necessary to do a root canal procedure and/or to surgically move the bone and gum lower to expose the fracture line. Functional forces such as biting, grinding and chewing, in addition to hot and cold thermal expansion and contraction, can stress a tooth which is cracked to the point it eventually will break. (It is of interest to note that thermometers are traditionally made using mercury because of its predictable response in expansion and contraction due to changes in temperature. roughly 50% by volume of a silver filling is made up of mercury.)
Traditionally, when a tooth breaks or cracks, it has been necessary to place a crown on the affected tooth. This is because of the need for a strong restoration to hold the parts of the tooth together. With today’s advancements in dental materials and technology, we now have the ability to bond tooth-colored resins and pressable ceramics that will restore the broken tooth and make it strong again.
Forces placed on the walls of the cavity by the expanding silver filling material, in concert with biting and functional forces, eventually weaken the tooth to the point it breaks. The damage to the tooth is sometimes sufficient to require root canal therapy, gum surgery and/or orthodontics to make the tooth repairable again.
Yes! It used to be that only children and teenagers wore braces. Now thanks to better diagnostic capabilities, and a better understanding of orthodontics, tens of thousands of adults are getting their life-long dream of straight teeth.
New types of porcelain are now allowing us to place thin shells of very strong porcelain on discolored, mal-aligned and misshapen front teeth to create a “Hollywood” smile. What was once relegated to dentists in Beverly Hills, can now be safety done here in the Tri-Cities in a far more conservative and less expensive manner.
Bonding porcelain to front teeth allows us to close spaces and to create smile proportions that look normal.
There is considerable debate currently regarding whether mercury is a safe component for dental fillings. “Officially” the jury is still out on this one. We know that in many people there is considerable concern over its safety. Competent medical supervision by physicians trained in this area, should be sought if you have concern with this issue. When it is considered that these fillings tend to expand over time and thereby cause cracking and fracturing of the tooth structure, to say nothing of their un-esthetic looks, and when given the choice, most people prefer a more esthetic and equally durable tooth-colored restoration.
Scientifically, it is well accepted that mercury is a heavy metal which as a neurotoxin is considered dangerous enough to require special handling and consideration prior to it being implanted into the body (fillings), as well as after it is removed from the tooth. It seems logical, despite its proclaimed safety, that where possible, it should be avoided and alternative high quality restorative materials used. Historically, it has been used primarily because it provides a cheap way to solve urgent dental problems due to dental decay, for hundreds of millions of people. Without question there are superior restorative materials available. Fortunately, we enjoy space-age restorative resins and ceramics which are very suitable for most restorative considerations. Additionally, where necessary, traditional dental gold can also prove to be a superior choice. While costs for these modern materials may still be relatively higher than for silver mercury, in our opinion, the higher quality makes these newer materials preferable.
New composite resins and ceramic porcelains have recently expanded the restorative options available for fixing teeth problems. This has given rise to the ever popular demand for cosmetic dentistry – that is, restoring teeth to look like teeth. These new materials fortunately allow us to be more conservative to tooth structure than other traditional methods.
Mouth odor is caused generally by Volatile Sulfur Compounds (VSC’s) which are made by bacteria and other decaying organic debris in the mouth. Typically, these bacteria hide on the surface of the tongue, between the teeth, and under the gums. Using a commercial mouthwash usually only covers up the odor without correcting the underlying problem. Correction ALWAYS involves anti-microbial measures to eliminate and control the bacterial populations in the mouth. This includes meticulous oral hygiene with floss and toothbrush, and should also include an effective anti-microbial mouth rinse such as solutions containing chlorine dioxide (Retardent), or other special prescription and/or dentist dispensed rinses. Efforts to fix bad mouth odor that do not include a dentist and/or dental hygienist, usually come to naught. Therefore it is important to work closely with dental health professionals while you are working to get in charge of this problem. People taking certain medications which may dry the mouth or cause a metallic taste, or people with chronic sore throats and tonsils or draining sinus areas, should also consider medical attention to further eliminate causes for bad breath.
Great staff! Always attentive to your scheduling needs."
Ed | Read More Reviews