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What is a Dental Implant?

– A dental implant is essentially a three-part component or fixture. A Dental Implant is made up of metal posts or frames.
– The bottom component is a titanium screw. This lower component is clearly attached to the jaw bone.
– The middle component known as a “abutment” connects the lower titanium screw to the higher component, which holds fixtures such as a crown, bridge, or dentures.

What is a Dental Implant?

– A dental implant can be given to anyone who has missing teeth (single, numerous, or all).
– It is critical that the patient has healthy gums and bones. Before proposing Dental Implants, the dentist must determine this.
– The individual must be a nonsmoker and either a managed diabetic or non-diabetic. If the patient is a smoker, he or she should stop smoking for the first three months while the implant integrates with the bone.

General Steps Involved in Dental Implants

Post Surgical Care

Single Tooth Missing

Only one tooth is gone in this case. The tooth is gone because it has fallen out as a result of trauma or damage. Or it was taken entirely due to incurable dental decay that could not be saved.

Many or Multiple Teeth Missing

This is a condition in which more than one tooth is absent. The lost teeth can be adjacent or altogether separate sets. If the lost teeth are close together, an implant-supported bridge is employed. If the lost teeth are not contiguous, single implants are most likely used.

All Teeth Missing

This is a condition in which all of the teeth are gone. All-on-four dental implants, All-on-six dental implants, and Implant-supported Overdentures are possibilities for edentulous patients. Sometimes individuals have numerous missing teeth, yet the few remaining teeth are deteriorating and cannot be saved. The following options are available for such patients as well.

What are Basal Implants?

Basal Dental Implants are a component of a sophisticated Implantology system. The implants are held in place by the basal section of the jaw bones in this technique. Basal implants, as opposed to standard implants, have a unique design that permits them to fit into the basal-cortical bone sections. The basal bones are constantly present throughout our lives. They are extremely strong and do not regress in the same way as the jaw bones do. These bones never alter. Basal Implants are typically recommended by dentists for persons who have severe bone loss, medically known as crestal alveolar bone atrophy. When we lose all of our teeth, the body assumes that the component of the tooth and its roots are no longer required. This causes the body to reabsorb the minerals from the teeth.