Can I Protect My Broken Tooth? Your San Diego Dentist will show you how with Crowns or Bridges.
Crowns and Bridges Porcelain Crowns
Crowns can be placed for many reasons: if the tooth has a large cavity, has had a root canal therapy, has a large, weak filling, to replace a failing or unacceptable existing crown or for cosmetic improvement. Crowns protect the remaining weak tooth structure from any harm in the future. There are three types of crowns used in the office today with the first two being used most often. Porcelain crowns, meaning that there is no metal used in the crown and it appears very natural looking, porcelain fused to metal which is a metal substructure with a porcelain covering that is also very natural appearing and full gold crowns which are only used in very limited and special circumstances.
Bridges A bridge is another alternative to replace a tooth or teeth that have been lost. Typically when one or two teeth are lost and there are teeth on either side of the space a bridge can be placed. Teeth on either side of the space would link an artificial tooth together in the middle. The bridge is cemented into the mouth and will remain in place. It usually takes Dr. Lange two visits to complete the process of placing a bridge.
Inlays, Onlays and Crowns
Inlays/Onlays are lab cured resins or ceramics that are not only stronger for the teeth, but they are more life-like then any other restoration in dentistry today. Your La Jolla cosmetic Dentist can place these restorations by bonding them to the remaining tooth structure after an old filling or a cavity is removed. This allows your La Jolla dentist, Dr. Lange, to be more conservative while strengthening the tooth at the same time. |