Tuesday, March 10, 2015

"It's like pulling teeth!"

There is an old saying that goes ....... "It's like pulling teeth!"
Well, is it really THAT hard to pull teeth? 
Answer ...... it can be. Especially when you have roots that look like these.
I took these pictures in my office over the past 3 days. 
It's like trying to get a fence post out of the ground, 
when the fence post has a huge fish hook hanging of the bottom of it.






Monday, March 9, 2015

1/2 Off Hip Replacement. Hips in a Day.

I had this happen to me, again, on Friday. It continues to happen and is becoming somewhat epidemic. Patients come into me for a 2nd opinion. I tell them they have 1 or 2 cavities. They are shocked. I ask them why they are so shocked. They tell me that they went to dental office XYZ because of a  1/2 off deal they saw. And that that dentist told them that they had around 8 or 9 cavities and that the patient also needed a crown.

Two things.

#1 Rules of economics. If a dentist offers 1/2 off of ANYTHING you have to understand what is going on. Where is the dentist getting that 1/2 off from?  The city is not charging him half price for electricity, water, sewer, garbage collection, etc. The owner of his building is not giving him 1/2 off his lease that month. The dentist is not cutting the staff wages by half for that pay period. The dental supply company is not offering 1/2 supplies. You see what I'm saying. The ONLY thing that can be cut is the profit of the company. In other words ..... the take home pay of the dentist. Now, it may be totally possible that the dentist is an amazing guy. And that he wants to take home less money for the good of mankind. And thus is offering these great deals. And I, when appropriate, have given discounts to folks that are having a hard time. But I know those people. And I know that they are in need. But to offer huge, across the board, discounts is something totally different. The dentist, more often then not, needs to make up the lost revenue. And where does he do it? By finding more work to do in your mouth. It happens ALL THE TIME. Bring people in on the cheap and then find a boat load of work to do. Weather they need it or not.  Thus making up for the freebies. PLEASE BEWARE OF THIS TACTIC. Get a second opinion.

#2 You get what you pay for? Just don't get taken to the cleaners. I often hear people talk about their aging parents. And they talk of them fondly. Especially when they become injured in a fall or other accident. They tell me, "I got mom the best hip surgeon in the state." or "I got dad the best cardiologist around."  I have NEVER heard. "Dad broke his hip. So I took him to "Hips in a day" or "1/2 price hip" or "I got a coupon in the mail for a free knee brace with hip replacement, so I took dad there."  It is a VERY good thing to save money. "I" want to save money. Everyone does. But WHERE you save the money is the important thing. Save money on the Blue Ray player, the cell phone bill, or not getting the under carriage treatment at the car wash. But going for the cheapy hip, knee, or brain surgery is just not smart.

Conclusion. I am NOT saying that I am the only honest dentist out there. What I AM saying is to get several opinions before you start any major work. Go to the coupon guy. Then go to the water fountain and marble counter top guy. Finally finish up at the guy in just the run of the mill office. Compare them. THEN make your choice. Also, make sure you decide where you want to spend the money for quality workmanship and where you don't really care. Do you want a Walmart bike or a bike shop bike? And its okay to get either of them at different times.  Compare prices. Call my office. I will give you my prices with no gimmicks or questions asked. Then call other offices. Get their prices. Compare.

Knowledge is power. Once you have done your homework, compared, and shopped around, then make your choice. And weather its at my office, or someone, else's is immaterial to me. I just want people to be happy with the treatment the get.





Wednesday, March 4, 2015

A cavity being filled. Step by Step.

One of the questions I get asked most often is ......
"What do you do when you fill a cavity?"

Well here is your answer.

This patient came in with part of the tooth missing. 
This is a fairly large cavity.
First step is to numb up the patient, remove the old filling, 
and then remove any decay and and unstable tooth structure.


In this picture we have done all of the removal mentioned above.
We then prep the tooth to receive a filling. 
We use the metal form in order to not glue the two teeth together.


The filling is placed and the form is removed. 


Just as simple as that. 







Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Dental Implants


Fantastic Implant case.
Patient came to me very frustrated with a tooth.
She had spent a lot of money on a crown, root canal, etc.
She needed a tooth in that particular spot but had been told
that the tooth that was there had to be removed.

What to do?
Implant.
In a day and age where we can replace hips, knees, hearts and lungs.
Why wouldn't we replace teeth?


Tooth as it was when the patient came to my office.

Tooth now extracted and implant placed.
This all happens at the same appointment.
The implant was placed where one of the roots was.
You can actually see the outline of the other root space.
That spot was bone grafted and will fill in nicely.



Here is the Implant whit the tooth in place.
Very stable. 
No more cavities.
No more root canals.
Very happy patient. 







Thursday, January 8, 2015

What if your dental visit doesn't fix the problem?

Lets say that you go into a dentist office. 
You have a problem. 
The dentist preforms some type of procedure and
tells you that the problem should be fixed.
The problem is not fixed however, and you want to
know what to do next.

First off, dentistry is medicine. 
Medicine doesn't always work.
The birth of a baby, sadly, is not always successful. 
Fusing a spine doesn't always get rid of the pain.
A total hip replacement doesn't always restore full function.

The same is true in dentistry. 

So what then? If the treatment doesn't "work" is a patient then just out of luck?
What is the Doctor's obligation if things still aren't going well for the patient?

Here is a list of what I think a health care provider should do, IF
sufficient time has been given for the procedure to take effect and 
the desired results have not been achieved. 

#1 Re-Do the procedure.

#2 Offer the services of a specialist, if there is a specialist
that can offer an advanced alternative.

#3 Provide information and/or preform alternative procedures
that could give the same result but in a different manner.

Here is a case that was successful ...........
the second time around.

The tooth in the middle of the shot needed a root canal.


Here is the picture of the finished root canal. 
The White line down the middle of the tooth is the filling material.
The filling material is not all the way to the end of the tooth but
is within the 1.5mm margin of error that is allowable for this
type of procedure. "By the book", this should have worked.

It did not however, and the patient was still in a significant 
amount of pain.


The option that was then chosen was to Re-do the root canal. 
All of the old material was stripped out.
The inside of the tooth was prepared further down the root.
The new filling material is now all the way to the end of the root.
The result is that the patient is now feeling much better.


Now there is a chance that the Re-do wouldn't have worked either.
At that point we would have moved on to the other options.





Thursday, December 18, 2014

Why X-Rays are VERY important.

Here is an example of why taking regular X-Rays is very important.
This X-Ray is of a 13 year old boy. 
Everything with his teeth looked normal, with one exception.
The X-Ray showed something that was out of place. 
Can you find it?




The answer is further down the page.






Not yet.







Almost there.






1 more time.






Okay here we are. 
There is an adult tooth the is literally sideways in the mouth. 
Not simply tipped a little.
Sideways.
This patient had to go to the Oral Surgeon and have the tooth 
removed through the front of the jaw bone.




The idea of getting X-Rays can be scary to some.
But for this patient to have simply waited to see what
would have happened naturally could have lead to much 
bigger problems down the road.