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Dental Implants Singapore Process: Long-Term Care
on June 3, 2014
If you're considering dental implants as a solution to missing teeth or ill-fitting dentures, you've probably looked into the steps involved in implant-based dental restoration, from that initial consultation with your Singapore oral surgeon to the final fitting of your replacement teeth. But do you know what to expect once your dental restoration is complete? When it comes to dental implants, Singapore patients often aren't clear on the final step in the dental implant process – long-term care. Since good care is crucial to the continued success of your implant-based restoration, we'll go over just what you'll need to know to keep your new smile in great shape.
Dental Implants Singapore: Home Care
Taking care of your dental implants is not a complicated process, but it is essential to their continued stability and function. In most cases, daily care simply consists of careful brushing and flossing at least twice a day, just like natural teeth. Brushing after every meal is best, but when that isn't practical, rinsing your mouth out well to ensure food debris is washed away is the next best thing. While your dental implants will not be subject to decay like natural teeth, gum disease can still become an issue of oral hygiene is lacking, which can lead to bone loss around your implants, causing them to loosen or fail.
Dental Implants Singapore: Professional Care
Regular dental checkups are always important to good oral health, but they become even more so once you've been fitted with implants. Singapore patients should have dental examinations and professional cleanings twice a year at minimum. Examinations should include X-rays or imaging to check bone health around your implants and a careful evaluation of gum health, ensuring that any sign of gum inflammation, infection or disease is caught and treated early – before it causes implant failure. Your dentist should also check your implant-based dental restorations to ensure that your replacement teeth are secure and functioning properly. Occasionally, screws or bonding that attach your replacement teeth to your implants or abutments can loosen, an issue that needs immediate attention to prevent damage or loosening of the implant itself.
So that's all there is to long-term care of implants, the same simple steps involved in the care of natural teeth. As simple as that care is, it is crucial that it be taken seriously. After all, if you've completed all the steps in the dental implant process, you've invested a significant amount of your time and money into that healthy and attractive new smile. By taking care to keep up with oral hygiene and regular dental visits, you can protect that investment, ensuring that your implants remain healthy and strong for decades – perhaps even a lifetime.
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