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| COSMETIC DENTIST |
We all know that first impressions are important in one's personal and professional life and a beautiful, confident smile can take you far! Dr. John Chaves has created thousands of beautiful smiles and is one of the leading experts in dental anti-aging techniques. With over seventeen years of experience you an trust your smile with Dr. Chaves.
Nobody looks forward to going to the dentist but with Dr. Chaves and his exceptional staff, your experience will be a pleasurable one. Our friendly staff and inviting office will make your visit to the dentist a completely new experience! |
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| VENEERS |
| One of the most effective ways to transform your smile is with veneers! Veneers can be used for many purposes - whether you want to fix one chipped tooth, correct gaps between teeth, or whiten teeth, veneers may be the answer for you. There are a variety of different veneers to choose from, one being porcelain. Porcelain veneers are very thin, natural looking, semi-transparent sheets of porcelain which are bonded over the surface of the teeth.
Veneers are one of the quickest and most transformational techniques to completely change one's smile!
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| DENTAL IMPLANTS |
Dental implants can be a great choice if you have lost one or more teeth. Compared to removable bridges or traditional dentures, dental implants offer a more convenient and permanent solution.
Used in prosthetic dentistry, a dental implant is an artificial tooth root replacement. There are several types of dental implants but the most widely used and successful option is the osseointegrated implant. Discovered by Professor Per-Ingvar Brånemark, the implant utilizes titanium which is successfully fused into bone when osteoblasts grow on and into the rough surface of the implanted titanium. |
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| DENTAL BRIDGES |
A dental bridge, otherwise known as a fixed partial denture, is a prosthesis used to replace missing teeth and is not removable by the patient. A prosthesis that is removable by the patient is called a removable partial denture.
A dental bridge is fabricated by reducing the teeth on either side of the missing tooth or teeth by a preparation pattern determined by the location of the teeth and by the material from which the bridge is fabricated. In other words the abutment teeth are reduced in size to accommodate the material to be used to restore the size and shape of the original teeth in a correct alignment and contact with the opposing teeth. The dimensions of the bridge are defined by Ante's Law: "The root surface area of the abutment teeth has to equal or surpass that of the teeth being replaced with pontics".
The materials used for the bridge include gold, porcelain fused to metal, or in the correct situation porcelain alone. The amount and type of reduction done to the abutment teeth varies slightly with the different materials used. The recipient of such a bridge must be careful to clean well under this prosthesis.
When restoring an edentulous space with a fixed partial denture that will crown the teeth adjacent to the space and bridge the gap with a pontic, or "dummy tooth", the restoration is referred to as a bridge. Besides all of the preceding information that concerns single-unit crowns, bridges possess a few additional considerations when it comes to case selection and treatment planning, tooth preparation and restoration fabrication.
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| DENTURES |
Dentures are prosthetic devices constructed to replace missing teeth, and which are supported by surrounding soft and hard tissues of the oral cavity.
Conventional dentures are removable, however there are many different denture designs, some which rely on bonding or clipping onto teeth or dental implants. There are two main categories of dentures, depending on whether they are used to replace missing teeth on the mandibular arch or the maxillary arch.
There are many informal names for dentures such as dental plate, false teeth and falsies.
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| ROOT CANAL |
Root canals is the commonly used term for the main canals within the dentin of the tooth. These are part of the natural cavity within a tooth that consists of the dental pulp chamber, the main canals, and sometimes more intricate anatomical branches that may connect the root canals to each other or to the root surface of the tooth. Root canals are filled with a highly vascularized, loose connective tissue, the dental pulp. This sometimes becomes infected and inflamed, generally due to caries or tooth fractures that allow microorganisms, mostly bacteria from the oral flora or their byproducts, access to the pulp chamber or the root canals; the infected tissue is removed by a surgical intervention known as endodontic therapy and commonly called 'a root canal'.
Tooth structure
An X-Ray of a recently performed Root canal procedure. The root was forming an abscess (infection), and as a result a bulb of some of the canal filling 'leaked' into the abscessAt the center of a tooth is a hollow area that houses soft tissue, known as pulp. This hollow area contains a relatively wide space towards the chewing surface of the tooth called the pulp chamber. This chamber is connected to the tip of the root of the tooth via thin hollow pipe-like canals—hence, the term "root canal". Human teeth normally have one to four canals, with teeth toward the back of the mouth having the most. These canals run through the center of the roots like pencil lead runs through the length of a pencil. The tooth receives nutrition through the blood vessels and nerves traversing these canals. |
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