Or risk having worse teeth than you started treatment with. That is a stern warning many dental associations agree upon for statistics are showing that kids and teens who have undergone orthopedic adjustments through braces are skipping wearing their retainers. This leads to a recurrence of their condition which has taken months to achieve only to have them re-set with another round of treatment.

Dental braces work on teeth for months to adjust and align them properly. After the right positions of teeth have been achieved, they are removed and replaced with removable braces or retainers that hold the teeth in the exact location for the time it takes the body to grow new bone, stabilizing the teeth into their proper place. Skipping braces gets the teeth back into their wild side, reverting to their original locations or even compounding an already successful procedure leaving them crooked as before. So dentists are getting tough on kids after treatment reminding them repeatedly to wear their retainers, for their smile’s sake(and their parents pockets too)

That is for dental restoration for there is nothing better than all natural teeth. Which might be the case why dentists nowadays try to preserve it as much as possible instead of simply pulling them out as they used to. From root canals to bridges that utilize existing teeth as anchors, they all work around existing teeth they can save but not to worry.

Tragically lost teeth can be replaced by dental implants with a great chance of success.
New materials are the basis of today’s dental technology from imaging to exotic materials hot out of the research labs, they all play part in the advancement of dental technology. From extremely resilient plastics, epoxy and other resins used to bond and coat teeth to tough metals the body does not reject and recognize as foreign we should be thankful to molecular biologists and other scientists for.

tech-spread

In dental restoration, dental surgeons and dentists use a variety of materials, depending on the need and type of operation, as well as the patient’s preferences. Here are a few of them:

1. Gold and other base metals
These are usually used for fillings, and are very durable, if not only for the metal sheen that stands out with the whiteness of the teeth.

2. Amalgam
Easily one of the most controversial materials used in dental restoration, it is made out of a mix of several metals, such as silver, tin, mercury, and copper. And while some may cite health concerns over it’s use, no scientific data has yet to solidify those claims.

3. Composite resin
Composite resin is composed of acrylic plastic material mixed with glass or quartz fillers, is sturdy, but is prone to discoloration.