Saturday, 14 May 2011

two front teeth are capped and now gums receded that much can see natural tooth.Are implants the only option.?

two front teeth are capped and now gums receded that much can see natural tooth.Are implants the only option.?

Answer by Carrie Oaky
We cant answer this unless as we are registered as dentists. It needs a professionals opinion.

Answer by LX
If gums are receded, it earnings you have bone loss and if bone loss, then you cant place implants until you do a bone graft.

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bone graft dental establish

If I may maybe find a doctor to say that a join or conventional dentures are medically not an option for me, would medicaid pay for the type of teeth replacement that screws into the bone? What about public that wear a full set of fixed removable dentures that have no teeth at all, would medicaid pay for them to get the implants that make it more possible to chew with fake teeth?
Thanks in advance for your answers.

Answer by Flower
Medicaid does not cover dental work for adults in my state. My past experience with Medicaid is they do not pay for implants because it is not medically necessary by any dentist’s definition and they would need pre-authorization but because of the cost I doubt Medicaid would. They pay only for dentures. If you have a medical doctor to give some excellent reason why you need an establish maybe they would do it but I dont reckon so. You should find a dental college which can give you a reduced price.

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