Multi Tooth Implants | Chantilly VA

Just like a single tooth dental implant for a single missing tooth, you can get multiple tooth implants if several of your teeth are missing. Teeth that are supported by implants are fixed permanently in your oral cavity, unlike dentures that you can remove. They don’t click or slip and you don’t have to worry about them falling out or moving while participating in various activities, eating or speaking. Furthermore, since tooth implants are placed in your jawbone directly, they help in preserving it and preventing its deterioration.

If the multiple tooth implants have to be put adjacent to your natural teeth, then these teeth along with the surrounding gum tissue should be healthy. If there is not enough jaw bone to support and place the tooth implants then your surgeon can build up the supporting bone by using bone grafting or bone augmentation before beginning the actual procedure of tooth implant.

 

 

In case you have multiple missing adjacent teeth, they can be replaced either with individual dental implants (one implant for each tooth that is missing) or by joining or combining multiple implants. The latter option makes multi-tooth implant procedure more affordable for people who have many teeth missing.

When you lose your back teeth (molar teeth) then it becomes very important to replace them through multi-tooth implants. The back teeth are large teeth with multiple roots and their main function is to help in chewing of food. These teeth are the main teeth for crunching and grinding while eating food. When you lose your molar teeth, all the workload of chewing is transferred to the teeth situated at the front (the incisors). These are single-rooted teeth and are not designed naturally to crunch and grind food the way your molars do. This excess stress on the front teeth may inevitably damage them in the long duration.

Advantages of Multi-Tooth Implants

If you have lost several teeth, then multiple tooth implants can replace them (the crowns of all and roots of some of them). You may achieve the objective by removal appliances such as partial dentures and fixed bridges. But in these conventional treatment approaches support is required from the adjoining teeth which are ground to act as anchors for partial denture or bridge.

Bone and gums often recede around removable partial dentures or a fixed bridge. Due to this your smile may become increasingly unattractive and collapsed. A removable partial denture is often not tight or secure as you would like it to be and it may move around in your mouth compromising your ability to eat food. Moreover, the cement that is used to secure the bridges may wash out and allow bacteria to get in and attack the teeth acting as anchors.

On the contrary, with multiple dental implants, the teeth feel and look just like your natural teeth. They also function like your natural teeth letting you speak and eat normally. They also help in preserving the bone in a better way by preventing its atrophy and stimulating it.

Hence, if you have multiple teeth failing or missing and you
• Don’t like wearing dentures or have bridge failure
• Are not able to chew and eat properly the foods of your choice with confidence
• Don’t have enough teeth in your mouth to provide support for a bridge
• Don’t want your teeth damaged due to a bridge
Then multiple dental implants are the right option for you as
• They are an ideal solution in the long-term that feels, looks, and functions in a similar manner to your normal teeth
• They are fixed in your mouth and you don’t have to remove them for cleaning
• While placing dental implants the adjoining healthy teeth are not damaged
• Multiple dental implant procedure has an extremely high success rate of 99 percent.

Alternatives to multiple tooth implants

Bridge supported by adjacent teeth
• The adjacent teeth have to be drilled so that they can act as anchors for the bridge; hence, it shortens their lifespan
• The gums and bone underlying the bridge will recede and shrink due to insufficient usage and leaves a gap
Partial Denture

• They may be uncomfortable and loose and trap food beneath while eating
• They require replacement every couple of years as dentures may become looser

Disadvantages of these alternatives

A bridge or partial denture may leave gaps in between teeth that may:

• Look embarrassing and unsightly
• Impair speech and eating
• Distort position of the surrounding teeth over time

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