Pros & Cons of Dental Implants

You may have seen dental implant advertising or wondered if you qualify if you're missing teeth. Dental implants may replace as many teeth as needed and offer numerous benefits, but you should have a balanced picture to make an informed decision. Read this guide to learn about the pros and cons of dental implants for different conditions. 

 

PROS: 

 

In contrast to temporary repairs, implants are long-term remedies, and as a result, they provide a wide variety of advantages. 

 

  • Preventing Bone Loss with Dental Implants: Your teeth's roots help to build up your jaw bone. When a tooth is lost, the bone surrounding the gap might deteriorate and dissolve. Periodontitis is the medical term for this.  

 

In the same way, that natural teeth are attached to your jaw; dental implants are fixed in the bone. The implant's screw thread serves like a natural tooth's root. Therefore dental implants prevent jaw bone loss. 

 

  • Permanent tooth replacement: Titanium dental implants are durable and biocompatible. Once implanted, the jawbone will grow around it like a real tooth's root. Implant-supported teeth may need to be replaced, although the implant itself can last decades with proper care. 
  • Maintaining Your Implants Is A Piece Of Cake: If you want your implants to last a long time, you need to take good care of them, but that doesn't mean they're difficult to maintain. 

 

You should brush them every day, have them checked out by a dentist, and eat a nutritious diet to keep them in good shape. 

 

  • Other benefits include: Replacing as many teeth as required, consuming a variety of foods, and chewing it easily. 

 

 

CONS: 

 

  • Prior Requirements: There are numerous prerequisites for treatment. If you've lost a lot of jawbone mass, the implant may fail. Dental implant surgery demands good health so the jaw can recover. Smokers shouldn't have implants. Smoking causes implant failure and bone loss. 

 

  • Top Restoration Can Fail: Your implant is merely the tooth section that holds a fixed restoration. It is not uncommon to replace porcelain in a crown or bridge after a few years or even a decade. If you have porcelain dental work, wearing a protective bite guard might help you get the most out of it. 

 

  • Multiple appointments: Dental implant surgery often takes six-month periods. The wait is necessary so the jaw bone may develop around the implant and secure it. Temporary crowns or bridges are utilized in the meantime. When the implant has fused to the jaw, implant-retained dentures can be affixed. 

 

  • Risky complications:  Infection of the gums, and damage to abutment teeth, nerves, and blood vessels are all possible consequences of implant surgery. Sometimes sinus difficulties appear with upper jaw implants. Even if you pick an expert dentist, poor dental health or smoking before or following the procedure increases the chance of complications. 

 

Finally, any surgical process has risks, and your dentist will make sure you are aware of these before deciding whether or not to receive dental implants. Today’s prominent dental specialists all speak the praises of what dental implants offer. But with that stated, implants do have certain drawbacks to consider. Fortunately, many of those claimed problems have extremely useful advantages that exceed them. 

 

Contact your Lafayette dentist, Dr. Massood Darvishzadeh, DDS at Lafayette Dental Group today to learn more about dental implant.

 

Resource:

 

BONE GRAFTING CRUCIAL FOR DENTAL IMPLANTS

 

*This media/content or any other on this website does not prescribe, recommend, or prevent any treatment or procedure. Therefore, we highly recommend that you get the advice of a qualified dentist or other medical practitioners regarding your specific dental condition* 

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