Loss of natural teeth is the final sign for many that age has caught up. Rather than resting on the gum line like removable dentures, or using adjacent teeth as anchors like fixed bridges, dental implants are long-term replacements that are surgically placed in the jawbone. Candidates for dental implants need to have healthy gums and adequate bone to support the implant, says an article on SeniorJournal.com.
Rather than resting on the gum line like removable dentures, or using adjacent teeth as anchors like fixed bridges, dental implants are long-term replacements that are surgically placed in the jawbone. Candidates for dental implants need to have healthy gums and adequate bone to support the implant.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (SeniorJournal), October 24, 2007:
These days they say 60 is the new 40, but some senior citizens are not sure their teeth have heard this news. The Center for Disease Control & Prevention says 26% of senior citizens over 65 have lost all of their teeth.
The salvation, for years, was dentures. Today, however, many senior citizens are turning to dental implants, according to Dr. Michael Tischler, a national authority on the new technologies for dental implants and bone grafting.
Teeth loss is not a pleasant thought for seniors who have long seen the jokes from George Washington’s wooden dentures to slapstick comedies involving teeth falling into glasses of water.
For many aging Americans, the loss of natural teeth is the final sign that age has caught up with them. Dentures, they know, most definitely signify a shift in lifestyle and can turn into an immense detriment to a person’s life. Dentures sometimes have been known to cause bone loss, offer lessened chewing ability and to cause speech problems.
Increasing numbers of senior citizens are opting for dental implants. Dental implants have become even more attractive because of introduction of Computerized Tomography (CT), says Dr. Tischler, DDS, of Tischler Dental in New York.
“It is the latest advancement in tooth replacement with dental implants and building up bone to support the implants” says Dr. Tischler, a nationally recognized lecturer and author on CT.
“Through utilizing CT for implant planning, procedures can be done more conservatively and faster with improved results.”
What is a dental implant?
Dental implants consist of a titanium cylinder placed into the bone that approximates the function of a natural tooth. An implant can replace a single tooth, multiple teeth, or support or replace a denture.
Dr. Tischler performs both the surgical and restorative aspects of implant dentistry and says the advantages of a dentist performing both the surgical and restorative aspects of implant dentistry are numerous.
For example, he says, “when the placement of dental implants is done by the restorative dentist, the implants can be placed directly in an ideal aesthetic and restorative position.”
Why use a dental implant instead of traditional dentures?
“Dental implants offer our patients that have lost teeth a second chance," he says.
With dental implants, a patient can turn back the clock, and live their life with "teeth" again. For people with dentures, he says, 29% eat only soft or mashed food, 50% avoid many foods and 17% claim they eat more efficiently without their teeth. Additionally, he says, for those who wear complete dentures, there is 66% less chewing efficiency as compared to natural teeth.
By replacing these missing teeth, you can avoid being one of these statistics. Once a person has lost a tooth, only a dental implant will stop the bone from being lost. The stimulation that a dental implant offers will approximate a tooth, and stop bone loss. A denture actually stops blood supply and will only cause further bone loss, and impede speech and decrease chewing ability.
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