Sunday 29 May 2011

Anyone have pricinf information on removable, implant anchored overdenture?

Anyone have pricinf information on removable, implant anchored overdenture?

Hi all and thanks for taking the time to read this and answer if you choose to. I am looking at a few possiblities when it comes to dentures. I have had probelms with perio and all of my teeth were baggy and hurt all the time. I finally chose to get dentures and have already started the process with having all of by back teeth removed. I am hearing a lot of horror tales regarding fitment, taste changes, and gagging when it comes to fake teeth or dentures. I recently heard of nobelsmile.com and I don’t reckon I would want full mouth implants but seen removeable implanted dentures and thought they sound nice and only require a couple of implants. Anyone willing to share any tales about these if you got them? Cost?

Answer by Bren
from what i have heard about them
the are better but way more expensive than dentures

Answer by dentalcare32
There is nothing like establish supported removable dentures. Persons who do not bring themselves to have patience and learn to exchange with the dentures plus new kind of hygienic efforts required spread EXAGGERATED tales. It normally requires six implants in the high and four implants in the lower jaw. You are looking at $ 18-25K in cost depending on the city and practice. You may also look for who is offering affordable comfortable BPS dentures.

Know better? Place your own answer in the comments!
Originally posted here:
cost of a dental establish

I had to have a tooth extracted days gone by because I was stupid and ignored the pain until it became so severely decayed it couldn’t be saved…..let that be a lesson to anyone reading this!!!

Anyway, the dentist said I should consider having the tooth replaced with any an establish or a join. Firstly, is this really necessary? The tooth removed was a molar so it’s not very visible. Next, can someone clarify to me the difference between and establish and a join? Which is best?

Answer by heresme0099
check and see why your dentist suggested replacement of the tooth. Not having the molar there may maybe maybe lead to future jaw problems.

Answer by jlouise8
First of all if you don’t replace the missing tooth the teeth on any side of if can drift into the space and cause your bite to collapse and can cause the tooth above it to super-erupt which earnings to grow longer because it has nothing to bite against. Then you can lose the tooth above the one that was pulled. It is like a domino effect. So it is best to replace the missing tooth. More than likely it would be a three unit join meaning that there would be a crown placed on each tooth beside the missing tooth that would retain a “fake tooth” in the middle. Having a establish placed would not effect the additional teeth, they would place a nitanium screw into your bone and place crown, which would replace the missing tooth. This is a lot simpler to clarify when you can see pictures with it. I hope it helps.

Answer by Kipper
Establish earnings the specialist has to place a screw in your jaw bone and screw in your new molar. Join earnings general dentist will make a new molar for you with 2 wings to glue to the front and back tooth to hold the molar in place. Any way you need it because if you don’t place the new molar in, the tooth in the back will go and push the rest of your teeth out of place and can give you migrain headache and you will need braces or surgery to assess your bites. More pain and cost lots more money. Do it now.

Answer by ShortyDH
It is not absolutely necessary that you replace the tooth, but it will be better in the long run. Missing a tooth can cause the additional teeth to shift, but not just the ones next to it, but also the ones opposing it (the tooth it would bite against can go up/down to fill in the space). If it was me, and I had the money, I would have it replaced.

Implants are very costly, but, they are the closest business to a natural tooth. You would have to be under general anesthesia and they would cut open your gums, place a titanium post into the bone, then cover the post up with the gums. 3-6 months later the dentist/oral surgeon would open back up the gums and glue an abutment to the post. This abutment sticks out into the oral hollow space and is covered by a crown. Implants are very expensive and it takes a while to have them placed, but, they are worth it. As long as you are a non-smoker and take care of it (coiffure and flossing), it will last. As far as bridges go, they are less expensive than an establish, but may not last as long. For a join, you need teeth next to the space where the tooth is missing. And it looks like three or more crowns connected to each additional. Nothing is really implanted in your gums. So it is vital to floss under the join. Here are some links to help clarify some more, in case I didn’t do a excellent job. But listen to your dentist. He knows the condition of your mouth and what will be best for you. And it never hurts to get a second opinion.
The Colgate websites have pictures at the bottom.

Answer by dre@itsa.ucsf.edu
A Join is like two crowns with a fake tooth in the middle. it takes at least three teeth to make a join. If the next teeth have a bunch of fillings then go for the join kill three birds with one stone. If the next teeth are virgin teeth, then don’t touch them go for the establish, provided you have adequate bone. an establish you can floss and is simpler to maintain and you get to place persons next teeth alone.

There is a ton more that needs to be taken into consideration.

excellent luck

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