Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/11/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Thanks for outing yerself and providing this info Phil. Much appreciated. As I'd predicted my dentist voted for extraction this afternoon. I asked about the chances of root work, but he said it'd fail, without providing the detail you did. So I'm booked in for a free initial consultation next week with his friend a couple of floors down, a specialist in more difficult tooth doctoring it seems. I'm on amoxycillin and ibuprofen in the mean time. Hmmm? I could have a nice man drill a titanium stud into my jaw bone (with a smile) and be able to eat properly, or, get an M8 and have smile all of my own (minus a tooth). Decisions, decisions. Thanks Phil. The LUG comes through again. All I need now is a kitten suit, some arm dragging lessons and a few moments of Kyle's time. :-) Rick. n 01/11/2006, at 2:39 PM, Phil Swango wrote: > Rick Dykstra wrote: > A friend at work says that her dentist offered to do a root canal on >>> her cracked molar, though she had it extracted at the time (it >>> was a >>> wizzy). So the question is, is doing a root canal on a cracked >>> molar like mine generally an option, or not? Perhaps my dentist is >>> a little conservative. ?? >>> > > OK, I'll out myself as a dentist, although more research than > clinical. The > basic idea here is that if the crack extends into the pulp chamber > or the > root canal(s), then the canals can never be sealed, and a > traditional root > canal filling won't work. If the crack is superficial or glancing and > doesn't involve the pulp chamber, a root canal might work, but > you'd want to > put a crown (cap) on the tooth to keep the crack from getting > worse. Even > then there might be some risk of failure. > > Without seeing the actual tooth or xray, I would venture a guess that > extraction is the only option. Since the tooth you describe is the > first > molar (3rd from the back), it's a pretty important one from the > standpoint > of chewing, etc. If it were me I'd go for a replacement either by > bridge or > implant. Either one will cost you a bundle, so if you were > planning on > ordering that M8, think again ;-). I have several implants myself > and they > are quite a good solution. But they are expensive, at least in the > USA > ($3-4000). > > And Walt, put down that tube of Superglue because it won't work ;-). > > -- > Phil Swango > 307 Aliso Dr SE > Albuquerque, NM 87108 > 505-262-4085 > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information