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 Butler G-U-M Proxabrush Snap-On Tapered Interdental Brush Refills 624R - 1 Ea

Butler G-U-M Proxabrush Snap-On Tapered Interdental Brush Refills 624R - 1 Ea

Monday, December 12, 2011

Understanding Dental Implant Bone Grafting

Understanding Dental Implant Bone Grafting


You may have decided that you'd like to replace your missing teeth with dental implants instead of dentures, but aren't sure what is involved. The short answer to that is that it will depend on the current health of the bone into which the implants will be inserted.

Unless your jawbone is healthy, and has not suffered erosion from infection, gum disease, or previous tooth extraction, you will need to have it built up so that it can hold your implants securely. Dental implant bone grafting is a lengthy process, but can usually be done in your dentist's office.

Your dentist will use either "autogenous" bone, taken from your own body, or a synthetic or artificial bone substitute. Cow bone is also used frequently for dental implant bone grafting. The addition of this bone will stimulate your body to build new bone around it, but with some synthetic materials the body does not respond by producing new bone, and the synthetic material does the Job of securing the dental implant.

Methods Of Dental Implant Bone Grafting

There are several methods of dental implant bone grafting; block bone grafting entails removing bone from another part of the patient's body. Autogenous bone for a dental implant bone grafting procedure is usually harvested from a patient's hip or chin, implanted in t he area where the tooth is being replaced, and allowed to heal and grow new bone for at least three, and as long as six months. Any bone taken from areas outside the patient's mouth will have to be removed in a hospital by an orthopedic surgeon, and transferred to the dentist.

Allograft bone used in dental implant bone grafting is taken from cadavers and under the very close supervision of bone banks. This type of bone harvesting has been going on for years and has supplied bone for thousands of medical and dental procedures with no instances of transmitted disease.

Animal bone used in dental implant bone grafting is known as xenograft, which is the term used for any trans-species transplanting. Both allograft and xenograft dental implant bone are foreign substances to a patient's body and, very infrequently will trigger a rejection.

Regardless of the source of the dental implant bone graft, the object is to stimulate the body's bone production in the implant area. One way of making sure the bone growth occurs as quickly as possible for the dentist to insert a "barrier membrane" around the newly grafted dental implant bone. This will keep the body's more rapidly growing tissues which surround the graft from filling in the areas in which new bone is meant to grow.

Performing a dental implant bone graft with bone expansion requires the dentist to use bone expansion tools to separate sections of the jaw bone and insert the bone implant between them; if the bone is already strong enough to secure it, the dentist may place the implant in the opening instead.

When Bone Grafting Is Not Appropriate

If dental implant bone grafts, bone growth, or bone expansion will not provide sufficient support for a dental implant, the patient may have to have a mold taken of his ore her jawbone and a plate inserted to hole the implants.

If you have plenty of bone tissue and the gums and teeth surrounding the area where you want a dental implant are healthy, then you may not have to concern yourself with dental implant bone grafts. But be prepared for an extended period of procedures and healing, and accept that having dental implants is the most expensive way you will find of replacing your teeth.




Monday, November 21, 2011

Patient Advice: Teeth Implants or Dentures?

Patient Advice: Teeth Implants or Dentures?


Patients with missing teeth very often want the gaps left behind filling with replaceMent, false teeth of some kind. These are normally teeth implants of dentures. To a patient, these can seem quite similar, and even when the differences are explained, it can be hard to know which option is right. Dentists will advise on the right option, depending on the general health and age of the patient, the number of missing teeth and the quality and quantity of available jaw bone. A good piece of patient advice is to ensure that your dentist can clearly explain why he or she is suggesting one treatMent over another.

The differences between teeth implants and dentures include the fact that dentures are removable and that implants are surgically and permanently implanted into the jaw bone to provide a fixed tooth replaceMent. This means that the procedures involved in the two options are very different: a removable denture can be measured and fitted in as little as two dental appointMents as close together as one week whereas dental implants require three to six months' worth of healing before the crown can be fitted. The procedure for teeth implants is surgical, carried out under local anaesthetic and some pain and discomfort will be involved.

When the jawbone is not used as an anchor for teeth, natural or false, it shrinks away. Teeth implants are placed directly into the one so help to preserve the jaw. They are made from titanium which is hypoallergenic and which has the quality of being able to fuse directly with the bone. When removable dentures are used instead, there is nothing protecting the jawbone from shrinkage and over time the bone will shrink back and will change the shape of the mouth. This means that dentures will begin to move around and feel loose and will eventually have to be refitted. Although teeth implants are significantly more costly than dentures, they last longer. Most implants stay in place for the life of the patient, whereas dentures become loose and need replacing.

Not all patients are eligible for both options. For example, in order to work teeth implants need plenty of bone of good quality around the jaw. If shrinkage has already happened then the dentist may not recommend the treatment, although bone grafts are a possibility. Children and teenagers who have yet to finish growing are not eligible for implant treatment as continued growth of the bone could lead to subsidence of the false teeth. Dentures on the other hand are suitable for almost anyone missing more than three or four teeth.