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Are You Ready for Dental Implants? | Ocala FL

dental implants

Dental implants are typically used to replace one tooth, or multiple teeth when combined with dentures or bridgework. If you’re missing one natural tooth, then a single implant will be sufficient. For larger spaces with two or more missing teeth, you don’t need one implant per tooth. Instead, the implants will be appropriately spaced depending on the volume and quality of bone tissue at each potential implant support, to support the replacement teeth. 

But before you proceed, there are a couple of things you should discuss with your dentist in Ocala, FL, including:

Amount of Bone Tissue at the Intended Implant Location 

Using dental X-rays, the oral surgeon can determine the height of the bone available to assess whether it’s sufficient to support an implant. In addition, the surgeon may use dental CBCT scans (cone beam computed tomography scans) to provide a 3D view of the jawbone to assess both its height and width, which are important to establish the quality and quantity of bone. CBCT scans also help to identify the position of anatomical structures (maxillary sinuses in the upper jaw and the inferior dental nerve in the lower jaw) that must be avoided. 

Duration of Dental Implants Treatment 

From the time of surgical implant placement to the time of placing the replacement tooth (crown, denture, or bridgework), treatment time can vary between four months and nine months, depending on the availability of good quality bone tissue. Patients with low bone density may require additional procedures like bone augmentation that increase the treatment time to six months or even more. Similarly, patients who require more dental implants to support dentures may need to have 3-4 implants placed at a time, which will increase treatment time to about nine months. 

Final Note: Filling the Gap While Undergoing Implant Treatment

If the teeth you want to replace are in a visible part of your smile, then it’s important that you have a temporary tooth to fill the gap during treatment. The common options are simple plastic dentures and removable bridges. These temporary restorations should not be put under heavy pressure (biting or chewing) as this could interfere with the healing of the underlying implants. Temporary restorations are not as comfortable or aesthetically pleasing as your final restoration, but they should allow you to function better until your treatment is completed

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