what is the best implant to get?
by Sirkullay
for teeth replacement, the ceramic establish or titanium establish and what is the difference between them-thanks.
Answer by PenPress
They work the same way….these are not visible….placed within the bone.
The ceramic one is just a hype to charge you more.
Answer by John Bridger – DDS
The titanium implants have been used for many years and have proven themselves to be very bio-compatible and very strong. There are some public but, that do not want any metal in their bodies, or some that are allergic to titanium (which is very rare). For persons select few, the zirconia (ceramic) implants are a fantastic alternative.
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average cost of dental establish
The dentist tried to reglue it back with a permenant seal but it fell off again, she said there’s nothing she may maybe do but to reglue it every time it fells out, because I have a perfectly health roots, she don’t want to try tooth establish since it’s not roting or swaying. Can I just glue it my self with a permanant or super glue instead??
Answer by Jewels
no u might glue ur cheek or something by accident…go back to the dentist question her place something stronger on it…
Answer by not-so–dumb–blonde
you need a post and crown, if your dentist hasn’t offered this find a new dentist This conundrum isn’t unusual obviously you had persistent decay…it happens a crown is only guaranteed for 5 years A crown with a pin will look no different, does not hurt the integrity of the tooth it will cost a small more then just a crown but will be worth it. Absolutely do not attempt to glue this yourself.
Answer by thddspc
Unfortunately, super glue won’t work. For one business, superglue works only on clean, dry surfaces, and it’s all wet inside your mouth– It won’t set properly in that kind of environment.
Since the crown fell off with a piece of your tooth inside, the tooth has broke and thus the crown no longer has sufficient tooth structure to “grab” onto. No matter how strong a glue you use, it’s never going to stay on anymore.
Any the post + core + crown all need to be redone if there is enough tooth left, or the tooth needs to be pulled. You might want to get a few second opinions to help you choose which way to go.
Excellent luck.
Answer by december
no super glue will kill the nerves in you tooth seen a guy in my office that did that,was terrible…have you questioned her about a new crown that fits better..is she using permentant reinforce?
Answer by HeatherS
If part of your “natural tooth” fell off inside the crown, this may have compromised the margins of the prep. Continuing to re-reinforce a crown is not "correcting the conundrum" rather it's adding to it. There is a reason this crown keeps coming off, it doesn't fit anymore. Any the part of the tooth that came off, or persistent decay, has compromised the margins of the crown so that when it's re-cemented it will "leak inside the crown" causing a reinforce stoppage again. It's the "leaking" that is the serious conundrum. This slow steady leaking of bacteria is coating the inside of the "crown and your tooth" not only causing the reinforce to fail but it's coating the "uncovered" part of your natural tooth allowing simpler and highly possible decay to take place and also allowing bacteria to saturate the dentin tubules of this uncovered tooth maybe reaching the pulp or nerve that may maybe necessitate the need for a root canal in the very near future.
I would suggest that you have another dentist examine this tooth and give their assessment. Without looking at the tooth or an x ray, I would say you maybe need decay removed, a pin build up and a new crown. A post (as someone suggested) is never placed in a tooth unless it's had root canal therapy.
Find another dentist, one who will solve the conundrum, not make it worse or add to it. I hope that I've been of some help and that you will seek out another dentist with more experience in crown and join work very soon. Excellent luck!
Additional information: Do not use super glue, you will most beyond doubt cause a root canal therapy to be needed and likely to cause the need for the tooth to be extracted.
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