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Frequently Asked Questions


 

As a new patient in our office, you may benefit from the questions that previous patients have asked over the past years of Dr. Cottrill practicing prosthodontics, cosmetic dentistry and implant dentistry. Please read the following information. If you have natural teeth, partial dentures, complete dentures or implants, this information will be helpful for you. If you find that you have additional questions, please ask them! We look forward to adding your questions to the following.


Why is professional recare important?

Preventing disease is an important part of dental service, perhaps the most important. With good care, your teeth may last you a lifetime; however, without regular recare by your dentist or preventive disease specialist (a hygienist-dentist-expanded duty dental assistant), you are taking chances with your dental health. At preventive disease appointments, an examination is performed which can find dental disease that may have started or is occurring in your mouth.

Early treatment of the disease is most often inexpensive and painless. If you have crowns in your mouth, checking the strength of the cement can allow early re-cementation before dental disease may seep in around the borders of the crowns under the teeth. Occasionally, patients will be of the opinion once their teeth are capped(crowned) they no longer are vulnerable to tooth decay in that tooth--NOT TRUE; crowned teeth are nearly as susceptible to decay as any other teeth. Further, gum disease and bone loss cause the loss of more teeth than dental decay.

With regular recare, the process of bacteria causing your gums and bone to pull back can be treated early and many times stopped, slowed or prevented from occurring in the future. There are several laws of dentistry and care; one of them is: "The dentist cannot overcome what the patients will not do for themselves." Conscientious dental professionals will help you learn how to best care for your teeth and prevent dental diseases.

Our team will attempt to make you regular preventive disease appointments, and your record of making those appointments or refusing those recommendations will be so noted in your dental chart. You may even receive a warning letter suggesting you are taking chances with your dental health by not following recommendations for routine recare (tooth cleaning, decay- detecting radiographs or other radiographs).

Dental diseases (decay, bone loss, gum disease, infections) can occur and develop quickly; again, if the disease process is caught in time, a tooth or adjacent teeth may be prevented from their being lost to the disease.

Occasionally, a patient will mistakenly be of the opinion, the cleaning appointments are for the benefit of the dentist's pocketbook; not true, recare is not an expensive service and will not sustain a dental office's overhead. Dental preventive disease appointments are in the patient's best interests--solely.

Listen and care for your teeth well; make your recare appointments as recommended. Most recare is at 6-month intervals; however, your dentist may find very good reasons to suggest you follow a recare schedule of 2-3 months if you are in danger of a disease or habit-process damaging your teeth, gums, bone or jaw joints.

Patients who smoke have more gum-bone disease because the tar and nicotine coat the crown and root surfaces of your teeth pushing the gums and bone back. Frequent tooth cleaning (prophylaxis = prevention) can help prevent smoking from causing the early loss of your teeth due to bone loss.

Do your best to maintain the best health of your teeth; if you ignore your teeth, they will go away; this is another law of dentistry.

 


How may my badly injured or unattractive teeth be restored and do badly damaged teeth need root canals?

Restoration of the diseased portion of your damaged teeth may require fillings, crowns or veneers. On some occasions, teeth need root canal treatments in combination with crowning. This can be due to a tooth previously having disease or damages that have injured the nerve in a tooth. The nerves in our teeth, due to injury or disease, may first become aggravated and hypersensitive and later become very painful.

When a tooth is sensitive to cold, then hot, and becomes painful with the tapping of an instrument, most often , that tooth will need a root canal. Occasionally, a patient's teeth will have very large nerves, and even routine preparation of the tooth for a crown may result in the need for the nerve to be removed and the canal filled (root canal treatment). On some occasions, a tooth will develop a crack and become sensitive first to cold and then hot. This tooth's nerve may stop hurting and heal with a crown placed; however, if pain does not go away, the nerve may have to be removed and a root canal filling placed.

Crowns and veneers are often placed on teeth for cosmetic improvement of a patient's smile. With the process of crowning or veneering teeth, there is some gum removed for the purpose of making an accurate impression; care of your gums, thereafter, should have special care and after-impression instructions importantly followed.

Gums take two weeks to heal new skin, and it is not uncommon for your gums to be sore after the preparation for the placement of a new crown. This is usually short-lived and healing is usually uneventful; however, on occasion, a groove or line in a gum contour may result from a tooth's preparation for either a veneer or crown.

Bridges, crowns or veneers are wonderful dental care services; and with the temporary discomforts experienced, patients most often heal in a short period of recovery time, and the temporary pains are overcome by the gains of the needed or desired restorative service(bridge, crown(s), veneer)


What is the difference between a veneer and a crown?

Often, patients will ask what is the difference between a veneer or crown? A crown covers all of a tooth; whereas, a veneer covers the face side of the tooth and varying amounts of the biting edge and sides, leaving the tongue side of the tooth without preparation.

There are occasions when veneers are popularly selected over crowns and they preserve some of the tooth from being cut and reduced; however, they should be considered a half a crown or more, and when the tongue side of a tooth is weakened by decay and previously- placed fillings, many times a crown is a better care. Both can be performed very well with ideal color results; however, crowns have some advantages in that they may be custom-made to contour and color-correct appearance more easily.

Also, crowns may be cemented with intermediate cements that allow the crown to be removed, repaired, and replaced easily or with minimal stress to a tooth. Veneers, on the other hand, are strongly cemented and if something happens to damage the veneer or it leaks its cementing media, the entire veneer would have to be replaced.

Crowns, most often, have metal inside for strength; as a result, they are usually much stronger than veneers. Porcelain veneers usually do well for years at a time; however, they are more fragile than metal reinforced crowns.

Also, porcelain veneers cannot be removed, once placed; whereas, crowns cemented with an intermediate strength cement, most often, may be removed and repaired if they are damaged. Veneers and metal reinforced crowns or all porcelain crowns are excellent services, and they can provide many years of successful service.


Will my crowns be cemented permenantly and what are my options?

Patients often ask if their crown will be cemented with a permanent cement? Unfortunately, there is no such thing as a permanent cement; none of us is permanent nor is a permanent hairstyle obtained from your hairdresser--permanent.

Cements are classified as: 1) Extra-strong, 2) Strong, 3) Intermediate, and 4) Weak.

Cementation of crowns and bridges may be recommended to be performed in an intermediate cement. This allows a crown or bridge to be removed, if needed. There are many advantages to this cement's use; however, this cement needs to be checked with regular recare. Short teeth require a stronger cement and cements are often increased in strength after a patient has comfortably worn a crown for a period of time.

 

How long will my crowns, veneers, bondings, or fillings last?

Another frequent question about crowns and bridges is: "How long will my crowns, veneers, bondings, fillings or bridges last?" The answer is: There is no way to give you an exact answer to this question. Crowns, veneers, and bridges could last twenty or thirty years, or they could last less than five years if abused. Bondings are usually discolored in 5 years and may need to be replaced at that interval.

Fillings can last many years; however, many times the margins of the tooth around the filling will deteriorate with considerable time. All of these restorative services' lives are shortened:

1) When patients fail to follow their recommended preventive disease appointments;

2) When patients grit, grind or clamp their teeth together;

3) When patients change a habit and start eating something that causes root decay--Certs, hard candies, occasionally Tums;

4) When patients lose bone through gum-bone disease around their teeth and completed crowns or bridges.

Restorative dentistry provides many benefits for patients; however, there is no warranty or implication the services will last the test of a lifetime. Largely bonded tooth surfaces have a lesser life span than porcelain veneers, will discolor over three to five years, and they may decay around the areas of the bonded surfaces.

With good preventive care and avoiding damaging habits that can cause further dental decay, restorative services may last for decades, and the main determination of how long these services last will be determined by the person you see when you look in a mirror--you!


Why are my teeth becoming longer?

Patients will wonder, from time to time: "Why are my teeth becoming longer?" This can occur naturally to some extent. The Bible talks about "becoming long in teeth." That reference relates to the process of the gums pulling back with time, tooth clenching or with dental diseases. Excellent home oral hygiene care in combination with following recommendations for regular preventive disease can slow this process in occurring, and in many patients, there is little perceptible increase in tooth length over a decade or two.

However, when gums are shrinking, the roots of a tooth will often be exposed to the mouth's fluids and foods making the tooth's root much more susceptible to decay than the crown. Many times, patients will mistakenly think the whole tooth is composed of an outer surface of enamel.

Unfortunately, the tooth's root has a much softer surface than the enamel on the clinical crown of a tooth; it is called cementum. This material (cementum) is likened to bone and is much less hard and much more susceptible to decaying influences such as: acids from candies, troches, cough drops, soda pops, and other sweets.


What is a root canal, how long will it last, and does it require additional dental service?

Each tooth has one or more nerves; incisors and canines usually have one major root; premolars sometimes have two or more, and molars have three or more, and often four. There is also the possibility of a tooth having small accessory microscopic canals where a nerve or blood vessel traveled through it. When a nerve in a tooth dies, it is said to become "necrotic."

The process of a nerve dying is like any other necrotic process; necrosis gives off gases and by-products of the dying process that may accumulate pressure at the tooth's root end, causing pain. There are two possibilities with a nerve dying:

1) The tooth will develop an acute abscess with pain; the preferred method of treatment is a root canal in combination with the administration of antibiotics; or

2) The tooth will develop a chronic abscess.

There may be occasional slight pain; however, it is not a throbbing pain which awakens a patient from sleep, as occurs with an acute abscess. A chronically abscessed tooth may develop serious bone loss leading to the loss of the tooth and also, adjacent teeth. For this reason, root canals are equally important for chronically abscessed teeth as well as a painful, acute abscessed tooth.

Root canals require the filing away of the interior of a tooth's nerve canal. After filing is completed, the removal of the nerve is accomplished with small files of increasing diameters (sizes).

Occasionally, a root is so curved its treatment with a root canal is difficult or even impossible. In some situations, files may break during the opening of a small, curved canal; however, a file may be occasionally used to close and finish a root canal filling. Most times, the nerve canal is filled with a plastic material and a cement. Root canals have good percentages of success, about 95 however, over a period of 20 years, a root canal- treated tooth may need re-treatment or a further root canal service such as the placing of a filling at the root end of a tooth inside the bone--this is called a "surgical root canal."

Surgical root canals have varying degrees of success and probably range in the neighborhood of 75 over five years. When a tooth having a root canal continues to be sensitive, there may be a crack in the tooth or the tooth's root may have very small accessory canals that cannot be filled.

Occasionally, a tooth's interior will continue to calcify to the extent the tooth's canal will become smaller and smaller and eventually not be seen on a radiograph, or found with files in an attempt to perform root canals. One may say, the tooth had performed its own root canal filling; however, there may remain a need for the root canal to be performed (such as a need for a post to restore the tooth with a crown), and on a few rare occasions, posts are successfully placed in completely calcified tooth roots.

The major difficulty with root canal-treated teeth is the lose of blood supply causes the tooth to become more and more brittle. As a tooth's root becomes brittle, it may split and then all of the restorative service for that tooth is lost. In today's broad range of available dental treatment, it may be better to consider replacing a tooth with a dental implant, rather than performing a root canal which may or may not be successful for the next twenty years. It has been Dr. Cottrill's experience, patients with root canal-treated teeth are much less successful over long periods of time, in contrast to dental implants, which generally have a much better history over long periods of time.

Nonetheless, root canal dental services are very successful and routinely performed by most dental professionals. Since a root canal removes the inside of a tooth and makes a tooth brittle, root canal teeth need crowns. If the tooth is a small root, like an incisor, canine or premolar, the tooth will need a post that extends into a portion of the root canal and extends above, for the purpose of supporting a crown.

A molar, which is larger, may not need a post to support a crown, and this is determined by the amount of tooth material remaining after the decay has occurred and fillings, crowns or root canal have been performed. Often, molars need posts, also. Posts may be made of small metal dowels to which plastic composites are attached to make a post and core. Posts may be made from plastic patterns cast into a one-piece complex of metal. For single-rooted teeth and small double-rooted teeth, most times, a cast post is stronger and will last longer.

Dowels and plastic cores for crowns usually will not last as long as a cast metal post, and what may occur is the plastic core breaking away from the cemented dowel and the crown coming off with the broken plastic core.

 

If I extract all my teeth and have dentures made, will I still have dental problems?

No, in reality, what you are doing is exchanging one set of dental difficulties for another. If your natural teeth are so troublesome you are considering this alternative, consider replacing some of them with dental implants which is a potentially permanent solution; conventional dentures usually compromise the quality of your life, not improve it. There are some occasions when natural teeth have to be replaced with dentures, and there are some other occasions when a patient is committing dental suicide by having their natural teeth extracted and dentures placed. There are many considerations in the choice of having multiple tooth extractions and a denture placed; they are:

1. Bone takes one and one-half years to heal from an extraction.

2. Bone falls into the socket with healing and does not fill from the bottom up. There will be 30 less bone present after one year, prior to the extraction.

3. The denture will need periodic re-lines during this shrinkage process and this is needed over one year and one-half. After this length of time, the denture will need a new base.

4. The dentures have flanges (essential parts for the development of suction), and these parts are 2-3 mm thick. Consider, your upper and lower lip now fit against the bone and skin of the upper and lower jaw. When a denture is first placed, it usually has to fill out your lip more than it was previously. Many patients find this a surprise and upsetting to their view of how they appear before and after their dentures are made. We have a more detailed narrative on the consequences of multiple tooth extractions and this should be read carefully, for the consideration of the choice of extracting all of one's teeth is an irreversible process with multiple far-reaching consequences. Ultimately, after teeth are extracted, the bone in the jaws shrinks much faster and averages about one mm/year. Consider the middle-aged patient who extracts all of his teeth and at sixty years old, can no longer wear dentures. Consider, also, the few, strong-gagging patients who can never tolerate dentures and "wear" them inside a glass in their cabinet, purse or pocket. Often, those patients' only course to a better quality of life is through complex dental implant care which is much more complex than would have been required with either keeping teeth or placing implants at the time of extractions.


Will my teeth last a lifetime with good care by myself?

Many patients' teeth will, with good home and professional care, last a lifetime; however there are no guarantees. Occasionally, there is the patient whose roots will shorten with time and teeth will become loose. Also, there occurs bone loss with teeth; however, this is much less than occurs with early extraction of teeth. By far, the greatest damage to teeth occurs with the terrible self-destructive habit of tooth clenching, gritting, grinding or clamping of one's teeth.

When a patient wears through the enamel, from tooth gritting or grinding, teeth become easily cracked or broken. It is interesting to observe the causes of tooth loss over a patient's lifetime; tooth loss is usually related to the damaging habits that cause decay, gum, and bone disease, and a patient's grinding, clenching or clamping their teeth together. All of these causes of tooth damage are usually habits patients have, and habits can be changed or controlled by good professional guidance--providing, the patient follows those recommendations and makes an effort to control or change their potentially destructive habits.

Smoking has to be a consideration in this group of causes for tooth loss. This habit, when unchecked, without frequent regular professional tooth cleaning, will cause the early loss of one's teeth. Smoking coats the surfaces of the teeth, including the root space areas of teeth, with tar and nicotine. The tar and nicotine push the gums and bone back, causing the tooth to eventually become loose. It is not an uncommon occurrence to see patients who experience the loss of one tooth exactly where they place one cigarette after another, hour after hour, day after day.

Consider a cigarette like a gun; what you are doing is shooting yourself, and that area of the cigarette placement is the barrel where the destructive nicotine, tar, and ash are shot against your teeth. By far, the fastest loss of teeth is associated with the intake of tobacco and the grinding or gritting of one's teeth. Rapid tooth loss is particularly associated with tooth gritting or grinding in dignified patients who grind their teeth.

Dignified teeth are more brittle and often by 70 years of age, if one grits or grinds their teeth, they will find themselves breaking their teeth and losing them more rapidly in their golden years. A valuable philosophy in tooth use is to: KEEP YOUR LIPS TOGETHER AND YOUR TEETH APART. This philosophy may seem unusual to a patient who holds his teeth together nearly or most of the time; however, it is most appropriate.

Remember, your teeth were designed to last a lifetime providing you do not abuse your teeth. Remember, your teeth were designed for: EATING, TALKING, AND SMILING. Think about it, when you are eating, are your teeth really touching; NO, they nearly touch. Think about it, when you are talking, are you talking through your teeth; NO, they should not touch when you talk.

Think about it, do your teeth touch when you smile? NO, again, smiling need not make your teeth touch, particularly hard. If you are in the habit of clenching your teeth, a by-product of tooth clenching will develop large jaw muscles; it may also cause degeneration of your jaw joints, and it may cause frequent headaches.

Perhaps you have heard of a painful process called temporomandibular joint pain? This is a painful headache-like process that is usually associated with tooth-clenching behavior. Sometimes, temporomandibular joint pain is caused by an injury such as an automobile accident or injury from a fall or a blow to the chin.


What is TMJ?

A common abbreviation of a difficulty many patients experience is called TMJ. Unfortunately, this is really a misnomer; TMJ means temporo-mandibular-joint. The process that one experiences jaw pain with an injury or tooth-clenching activities is actually a dysfunction, an injury of the joint that causes head and neck pain.

Also, pain behind the eyes is a frequent occurrence that occurs with temporo-mandibular-joint dysfunction. Many times, patients will benefit from conservative treatment with custom-made orthopedic devices to either free up the jaw to heal or to capture the disc, if the jaw disc is in a position to recapture.

In the early eighties, there were many occasions when patients' joints were operated on, and this was not very fruitful then nor is it now. The joint is a highly mobile, high-stress joint, and operating on the disc is not greatly successful.

The best care for pain associated with jaw pain is to reduce stresses by refraining from tooth clenching or grinding activities.

There are prescriptions and devices dentists can make to assist patients in the process of improving a patient's temporo-mandibular-joint dysfunction, and many times improvement in this dysfunction-pain syndrome can be improved with lessening pain for the patient. Unfortunately, serious jaw joint dysfunction can take months or years to improve.


Can my teeth be replaced by dental implants and what are dental implants?

Occasionally, a patient's badly diseased teeth are better extracted and the bone around them prevented from rapid loss with dental implants (healthy dental implants preserve bone found around natural teeth). By placing dental implants at the time of extractions, more bone is available for dental implants. Dental implants are, most often, in the form of cylinders that replace the roots of a tooth. Dental implants do not appear like natural teeth.

After the bone has healed around the implants (four to six months), a structure is placed in the implant similar to a post or another cylinder with internal threads to attach bars to the implants. Dental implants can be used to support one single post and, later, a crown or they can be used in groups of two, four or six to support bolted-on frames or bridges that support a removable partial denture or single crowns.

Dental implants are usually more resistant to dental infections than natural teeth. Also, dental implants are usually much stronger than natural teeth, being longer, and because bone fuses to the implants. Further, dental implants are most often made from titanium metal and much stronger than the most vital of natural teeth. When Dr. Cottrill first started placing implants (in 1970), he used to inform patients: "Implants are second best to healthy natural teeth."

However, after years of performing dental implants, Dr. Cottrill now suggests: "Dental implants are far superior to natural teeth." Dr. Cottrill has found that dental implants are very successful (over 98 for both upper and lower jaws). Dr. Cottrill is so confident of a dental implant's potential for success, he offers a free replacement of any implant that fails within the bone healing period (four to six months), or he will apply the total cost of the implant to other prosthodontics services.

After initial healing is completed, implant health is usually successful for many years, or the life of the patient. Dental implants are wonderful replacements of teeth and our patients tell us, over and over, they would not take anything in the world in exchange for their dental implants.

Dental implants are wonderful bionic replacements for their natural teeth; ask other patients of Dr. Cottrill's about their dental implants. We are happy to refer you to many dental implant patients to review their treatments with you. This is helpful in your making a choice in your dental implant alternatives.


Apprehensive dental patient?

Often, patients have past dental experiences that create terrorizing fears of anticipated dental treatment. We have been referred many of those patients, and patients are different in their dental experiences and pain thresholds, being higher or lower.

We recognize that God made 500 billion people, and no two are exactly alike. We will evaluate your history and apprehension of dental treatment and provide pre-medications in our office for your relief of anxiety. On those occasions, our patients usually forget they had any dental treatment, that day.

Also, your prompt recovery from extensive dental service, including implant placements, is our goal and we will prescribe pain medications that will enable you to recover with the least amount of post-care discomfort. You will be provided written instructions following many of our services and following those instructions well will greatly reduce your after-care discomfort and quick healing.


About narcotic prescriptions

Narcotic abuse and control of pain-relieving medications is one of the major problems that health care providers must face on a daily basis, especially in patients who have had chronic pain. It is a well-known medical fact that narcotic medication taken longer than three months following surgery can be detrimental to one's health and may suggest or even lead to the possibility of drug addictions.

It is imperative that the patient understand that following surgery, adequate pain relief medication will be given until the six(6)week period has passed. Fortunately, for most patients this works very well. After the six (6)week period, we want everyone to be comfortable, without pain and without the harmful effects of narcotics; therefore, if necessary, we will refer you to a pain specialist to manage your medications and other forms of pain control.

We will reduce your pain medicine prescriptions as you progress and write instructions for pain medicine use that will be recorded in your chart. Prescriptions instructions need to be followed with few exceptions. If you lose a prescription for pain medicine, it is likely there will be no refill for that pain medicine until the instructed amount of time has passed before we can (legally) provide you another prescription. If you have pain a few days or a week after a prescription is written, another appointment for an evaluation and examination will usually be performed before another prescription is written.

If a patient fails to follow a prescription order, another prescription may be refused. We are not in the business of helping patients feel good. We want to provide suitable pain relief for all patients; however, we are controlled in our prescription writing by rules established by the State of Tennessee and the Bureau of Narcotics.

At this time, computer processing of your prescription allows the governing board to monitor how much pain medicine you take and how often. This is accomplished by monitoring through our DEA numbers, your name and your address, as well as Dr. Cottrill's.

We care for your experiences in dental treatment and wish you to have a comfortable recovery; however, excess pain medicine taking will be considered a possibility if your needs are above normal. The governing agencies that control prescription writing have strict controls that need to be followed, and patient care has to follow a degree of normal variance in taking pain medicines.


Complete dentures

Complete dentures are only considered to be 20as efficient as natural teeth in function and comfort. Further, complete dentures are not the end of a patient's dental difficulties; they are the beginning of a whole new set of difficulties:

1) Bone under the dentures continues to shrink for a lifetime leaving less and less foundation for the dentures;

2) The upper denture settles up and back and the lower denture settles down and forward. This leaves a patient appearing as they did not have upper front teeth and pouches out the lower lip;

3) After five years of wearing a complete denture, there is usually so much bone loss the denture bearing areas need new bases;

4) After ten years, there is so much change the base will not fit even with a new base because the muscle attachments of the upper and lower jaws migrate toward the ridge and there is less vertical area for the denture base, also;

5) Denture teeth wear out and the entire dentures should be changed every ten years;

6) Seeds get under dentures during eating and more as the bone shrinks away; this cause pain with eating when the seeds are sandwiched between the base of the denture and the bone;

7) Dentures can come loose when patient sneeze, and more than one patient has sneezed their teeth out at an embarrassing experience.

Nonetheless, dentures provide benefit for many people; however, they should be known as being similar to artificial arms and legs--they are not as good as a healthy, full set of teeth or an implant-supported prosthetic system.

Often, patients develop changes in their faces with many years of wearing dentures; then, they wish a new younger look, and rearranging denture teeth for these patients often demands considerable time in setting and positioning teeth to the patients' satisfaction and desires for their smile.

Dentures are often the last resort or a result of patient's choices. On those occasions, many patients are happy with dentures and find them better than their recollection of the difficulties they had with their natural teeth; however, they are most often known as lesser substitutes and many other patients are unhappy with the choices that lead to their having dentures.

We do not recommend dentures unless there is no alternative; and, when this situation is presented, we counsel our patients to what they may expect as a result of tooth loss and denture-making. See the section on what occurs with multiple tooth extractions and the placement of dentures.


Removable partial dentures

Removable partial dentures are considered to be better than complete dentures, and they receive their support from adjacent natural teeth . Partial dentures also obtain their retention from those same natural teeth. Partial dentures replace missing natural teeth and should be very stable to be functional for any length of time. They are not as good as implants and bridges and have certain limitations.

Removable partial dentures are best made with cast metal frames, acrylic bases with hard plastic teeth replacements. They can be made, usually, to be very stable. However, after a few years, as the areas beneath the bases shrink, the removable partial denture will start settling and the bases start moving.

This movement is usually so gradual the patient does not become aware of it occurring. In addition, since the movement is gradual, the partial denture will pull on the supporting anchor teeth and often loosen the anchor teeth in the process of the bases settling. After five years of removable partial denture use, they usually need new bases to correct for the settling and changes that occur. Furthermore, the chewing surfaces of the removable partial denture teeth will wear faster than natural teeth or crowns.

As a result, the benefit of replacing missing teeth is lost with the chewing surfaces wearing away and the bases settling with bone loss. When this occurs, it is important to replace the worn teeth; most often, the metal frame will continue to fit for five, ten or fifteen years, and the teeth and bases can be replaced at a lesser cost than replacing the entire removable partial denture with a new metal frame.

Partial dentures may be made with hidden attachments, and these are often called precision partial dentures; however, all partial dentures should be made to fit in a precision-like manner. Many times, because of the lesser cost, patients will choose removable partial dentures with wires clasping the anchor teeth (called clasps).

On some patients, the clasps are not visible; for other patients with high or low lip lines during smiling, the clasps are visible. If you need a partial denture and wish the attachment systems to not be visible, attachments built on crowns are available which will eliminate the clasp (wires) from showing. We will discuss your desires of design with you and partial dentures are very helpful for many patients. The design of the removable partial denture is very important; whenever possible, the replacement tooth sections should be supported with teeth or bar assemblies.

This prevents the leveraging of anchor teeth from loosening the anchor teeth. Think about a sawhorse with a board on the top and how it can go down in two directions; when a tooth replaces the fulcrum of the sawhorse, the bases can move in two directions, forward and backward. As a result, the anchor teeth (sawhorse) will be leveraged from two directions; when this occurs, the anchor teeth will be loosened and damaged if this leveraging occurs over a few months or few years.

The loosening of the anchor teeth for removable partial dentures will occur in varying lengths of time; this depends upon how much bone the anchor teeth have around them, how healthy the gums are maintained, and how long the roots are. When the teeth loosen, often they are not able to be kept any longer.

Partial dentures need to be made to fit very well; if they are made in a temporary manner, with all acrylic frames and wire claps, they usually damage teeth, gums and bone around natural teeth quickly.


Appointments in our office

Our patient's time is just as important as ours; we recognize and consider each patient's appointment timing as carefully as we can. Unfortunately, searching for excellence in prosthodontics often finds us doing more than we planned for a particular patient, or treating another patient who has an emergency.

We schedule some time for emergencies daily; however, we often run late on appointments. If you are a patient who just cannot wait or if you have "hurry sickness," please make your appointments at 8:00am only. This is the only way you can avoid waiting because of a delay in our schedule.

Please feel free to call our office several hours before your appointment to check and determine if we are on time for your scheduled appointment. We attempt to keep up with delays; however, a delay can immediately occur which costs us several hours with an unplanned emergency need of one or another of our patients.

Another appointment time that may keep you from waiting very long is 1:00pm; many times, we find ourselves running an hour or more late during morning appointments. If you need further consultations regarding your treatment plan or if you would like to have an opportunity to further discuss treatment alternatives, the very best time is around five or six o-clock in the evening.

If you are a patient who is carried to our office by others, early appointments are the best to be treated and be on your way quickly. If you have special needs in your appointments, when we can offer a ride home, we will be happy to do so. Please communicate your special needs in your appointments so we can do our very best to care for you.


Our Financial Policies

Our general financial policy for dental implants is that fees for dental implants are due upon placement of the implants.

Our general policy for prosthodontic services is: One-half of the treatment costs are due upon starting treatment and the balance upon delivery of the prosthetic devices. Deposits on treatment services are applied to the cost of those services and not refundable unless no service has been performed.

Our services are custom-made for patients, and considerable effort goes into the making of our special prosthetic needs for our patients. We do not have finance plans for patients; however, we will be happy to assist and direct where you may go to obtain loans for dental services. Our banker/patients suggest we remain out of the banking business, that they are the professionals in that service. Regarding insurance, we are happy to provide the special services of applying for your insurance benefits.

Our insurance claims team will determine how to best file for your maximum benefits and discuss your benefits and how you would like to file your dental or medical insurance needs. We provide our patients many special custom letters in an attempt to make sure they obtain the maximum benefit from their insurance coverage.

Our business is in the business of providing our patients excellence implant and prosthodontic services and we look forward to being of benefit for you in your special needs.


Patient Classifications

During the Dr. Cottrill's time practicing prosthodontics, cosmetic dentistry and implant dentistry, Dr. Cottrill has been referred many patients whom other dentists care not to treat.

Those patients are generally referred here because of Dr. Cottrill's reputation in being able to satisfy patients. Special needs such as: better appearance, stronger restorations because of patients gritting or grinding their teeth so badly, complex implant needs, complex restorative needs.

During the course of Dr. Cottrill's time in dentistry of treating patients other dentists choose not to, we have learned which patients have the best course of success in their implant-prosthodontic needs.

The type of patients who understand their dental difficulties and other things in their lives are, many times, their responsibility, and do not blame everybody in life for the course of their lives are the patients with the greatest potential of success in anything in their lives. Those patients who want to blame others for everything difficult in their lives on others have the least potential of success.

Patients who are benevolent, understanding of others and caring of others and themselves have a greater potential of success in their lives. Patients who are toxic, uncommunicative, and have a negative attitude toward life, also, have the least potential of success. Remember, if you fail to communicate, you ex-communicate. During our examination and history making, we will have the opportunity to know your dental history and needs very thoroughly.

We will provide you letters on your history, your examination, and your treatment plan alternatives. This booklet is yours for keeping and we will answer any questions you have in the course of your treatment, should you wish to receive care in our office. We look forward to making more friends in the course of our care in our office and we hope you wish the same.


The unusual unfortunate experiences that occasionally occur with dental service

On some occasions, one could be hit by an airplane while crossing the street in front of your house. It is unfortunate, rare or seldom you would have to worry about falling airplanes; however, the chances exist. The same is true about some occasionally freaky things with any treatment of any health-care professional treatment.

For example, local anesthetics in dentistry are used for millions of patient care services each day. Most times, they are extremely well tolerated, and dental local anesthetics are very compatible; however, there can occur, in some rare patients, an allergy to one or another of the ingredients in the local anesthetic or more rare, an allergy to the local anesthetic, itself. An expression of an allergy to a local anesthetic is very similar to any other allergic response, and it is usually well treated with the emergency drugs dentists have in their offices.

Also, there is written, in the literature, of a reaction being potentially so severe, it may cause death to a person who has a compromised health history. Also, on occasion, the nerves about the face and jaw can be touched with an injection, and there can occur numbness for a varied length of time.

These experiences of numbness are infrequent; however, they can and will occur. Usually, these experiences of numbness are not great difficulties for patients; however on some rare occasions, numbness of a lip can create lip biting, soreness, burning or tooth pain on the associated side of the numbness.

This can occur more often with a tooth extraction, gum or bone surgery and with implant placement. Numbness or nerve injury can occur with greater frequency in some areas of dental treatment, and your dentist will inform you of what your chances of this occurring would be.

Occasionally, patients have extra nerves not found in regular places as suggested by anatomy textbooks; these secondary nerves can be damaged more easily because they are aberrant (extra or misplaced). Further, upper jaw teeth are close to upper jaw sinuses and the root portions of the teeth may even be half or more inserted in the sinuses. When one of these teeth is extracted, it is possible to experience a hole to develop from a nose to the mouth; again, this is rare; however, it can occur.

On some occasions, a nerve can be growing around a tooth root, and when this occurs, the pulling of that tooth may permanently damage a nerve causing numbness of that particular nerve. Nearly all dentists are very concerned about preventing dental services from creating any difficulty for patients, and much caution is exerted in preparing and preventing accidental injuries from occurring with patients; however on some occasions, a quick unexpected patient movement can cause a cut in a lip or tongue, and these things do happen more than being hit by airplanes.

A steady, calm patient, free from jumping and squirming, is a patient who can be usually assured of being unharmed with any dental procedure. I recall reading about a patient whose face swelled immediately with a dentist blowing air on a tooth being treated with a root canal; this swelling placed pressure on the nerve of touch innervating the lower left lip, and it was months before the nerve regained full feeling.

Dentistry is very similar to mechanics in many ways, and occasionally, a wrench will break and even with caution, injuries to patients may occur. We would like our patients to be aware that we plan to prevent and prepare and prevent, so we need not repair and repent; and we look forward to preventing airplane crashes in our care of patients.

God Bless and our very best in concern for you, our valued, much thought-about patients.


Location

Nashville Cosmetic & Implant Dentistry: Adam Cottrill, DMD
2828 Bransford Avenue
Nashville, TN 37204
Phone: 615-297-5577

Office Hours

Get in touch

615-297-5577