Most adults can expect to have 32 teeth. The four third
molars, or “wisdom” teeth, are often extracted because they do not grow into
the mouth well or there is not enough room for them in proper alignment. It is
very small unusual to have wisdom teeth replaced. But the other 28 teeth are
needed. Your mouth, jaw, and body developed together over millions of years.
They are designed to operate together at peak efficiency. When you lose a
tooth, the efficiency decreases and function suffers. When you lose a tooth,
you lose some ability to chew food properly. This may mean that you either
place more stress on the other teeth in order to chew all the food you eat, or
you do not chew well enough and what is swallowed is not quite ready to be
digested. This can lead to digestive difficulty. Or you might switch to a diet
that consists of softer foods that do not have to be chewed as much. You might
have to eliminate certain favorite foods because you cannot chew them
thoroughly. For each missing tooth, you lose approximately 10% of your
remaining ability to chew food.
Other problems also occur. The teeth adjacent to the space
to the left by the missing tooth will eventually shift. If for example, a lower
tooth is extracted, the opposing tooth in the upper jaw will grow slowly (or
sometimes quickly) longer in a downward direction into the missing tooth space.
This is called extrusion or supereruption. The teeth on either side
of the missing tooth space will move and tilt off their proper vertical axis
and drift into the missing tooth’s space. This can make these teeth more prone
to decay and gum disease because it is much harder to keep the teeth clean when
they are not aligned properly. Root structure that is normally covered by gum
and bone may become exposed. All this can happen if one tooth is lost. Other
major problems can occur if multiple teeth are lost. There is a loss of the
arch length, the distance from the back of the last tooth on one side of your
mouth to the back of the last tooth on the other side of your mouth. With
collapsed bite and loss of vertical dimension, the distance from your chin to
the tipoff your nose decreases, making your face shorter. Extrusion and
movement of your maxillary (upper) alveolar bone until the gum tissue from the
upper jaw can touch the teeth or gum tissue of the other jaw causes loss of
facial tone and shape. The facial muscles of the cheeks and mouth sink into the
edentulous (extraction) site. There can also be severe cosmetic problems when
the extracted tooth’s space is visible when you talk or smile. This is not a
pretty sight to anyone. There is a loss of self-image and self-esteem and a
feeling that you are getting old. Once you start losing teeth, you can actually
start to look old. Losing a tooth is pretty serious. The longer you wait after
a tooth is extracted, the more difficult and expensive it can become to make
the replacement you need. With very few expectations, it is better to replace
missing teeth as soon as possible. Evolution designed you to chew your food with
28 teeth.
We will discuss with you the type of replacement that would
be best suited for you. You can choose to do nothing at all and leave the space
or spaces, but as you can tell, this is not usually recommended. You can have a
fixed replacement made that could be an implant, a conventional bridge
(crowns/caps), a bonded resin bridge, or a combination of implants and bridges.
You could also have a removable partial denture made. The advantages of the
fixed replacements are that they are not designed to come out of your mouth at
any time, they are the easiest to live with, feel more like the original teeth,
and are perhaps more cosmetic then removable dentures. A removable partial
denture is held in place by metal claps that may be visible. It is bulkier and
may interfere with your speech for a period of time. However, generally,
dentures cost less than a fixed replacement.
Your chewing apparatus, jaws, and teeth were evolved to
function in a particular fashion. The interaction is complex and marvelous. Loss
of teeth degrades this function. Preserve your health. Replace missing teeth as
soon as suggested.
If you have any questions, please call Omni Dental Group at 512-250-5012.
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