Is a crown in your future

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Is a Crown in Your Future?

Do you regularly engage in combat or full contact sports? Without a mouth guard? Do you have a particularly strong sweet tooth? Does your home have hardwood or tiled flooring? Do you have a fondness for smoking or dipping tobacco? Do you have children that simply refuse to brush regularly? The above questions are just a few of the conditions that may necessitate a dental crown. Whether you lose an incisor in a hockey match, crack a molar from chomping hard caramels, shatter a tooth upon falling onto your kitchen floor or discolor your teeth from frequent tobacco usage, a crown can cover up the issue and restore your smile. A crown may also be necessary to protect the baby teeth of young children until their adult teeth can develop. Crowns intended for long-term use can be made from a variety of materials, with the severity of the tooth’s damage playing some factor in the patient’s options. 

Crowns made from metal and metallic alloys are commonly used for their durability and necessitating a minimal removal of tooth mass. One drawback of metallic crowns is their appearance; metallic crowns are extremely common in molars.

When appearances need to be maintained, metallic crowns can be fused with shaded porcelain to match your smile. The drawbacks of these metal/porcelain crowns are they are only slightly more durable than porcelain, can wear down over time and a dark streak is noticeable around the gum line from their metal.

While resin crowns are less durable and resilient than metallic crowns, they are among the cheaper options when a crown is necessary. Even beyond the variety of material options, crowns can also be made as partial implants; these “on lays” and “3/4” crowns cover only a portion of a tooth. Barring zirconia or milled crowns, which can be made on-site in a single visit, crowns require two visits to the dentist.

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X-rays and possibly a preliminary root canal if the tooth’s pulp is at risk. The dentist anesthetizes the tooth’s area to file it down for fitting; if the tooth is greatly damaged, the dentist will use filler to anchor the


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