Replacing Crown: A standard procedure or not? (vs, tooth, dentist)
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So I had a dental crown added while living in one side of a large metro area the size of Atlanta Metro. I since moved to the other side of the city 5 years later. A few days ago that dental crown fell out. So the original dentist that installed it is about 20 miles away. There are a lot of dentists in my new neighborhood.
Now I'm in IT field and know very little about dentist work. However, is the process of replacing a crown for a healthy adult of late 30's standard enough among dentists that I can just use a local dentist? That is instead of having to drive all the way down to the original dentist again.
Please pardon my ignorance I just wanted to get a non-biased opinion instead of waltzing into the office of a more closer dentist and asking "do you replace crowns?"
Still happens enough that it is common. Any dentist will do. They just glue it back on.
Funny thing is Amazon even sells a DIY kit. But dont do that. It still needs to be checked and done by a densist.
They can glue it back on if the crown and supporting tooth has no damage, I've had both happen. Usually if the crown falls off undamaged, it's quickly after if was first put on. If a crown comes off years later, it probably has had damage and you might need a new crown.
Still happens enough that it is common. Any dentist will do. They just glue it back on.
Funny thing is Amazon even sells a DIY kit. But dont do that. It still needs to be checked and done by a densist.
You can buy a tube of temporary dental cement at CVS. But like you said, it has to be permanently reattached by a dentist. If you decided to put it in yourself with permanent glue the tooth would probably have bacteria on it and decay under the crown
Location: East of Seattle since 1992, 615' Elevation, Zone 8b - originally from SF Bay Area
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Quote:
Originally Posted by charmed hour
Get it looked at. My crown popped off and when I saw my dentist to reglue, the post was broken. A whole new root canal needed.
Yes, it can go either way. I would prefer my own dentist but it's not a big deal. I have had several come off and get glued back on (darned Sees Candies suckers) but just Monday I I spent two hours in the chair starting to have one replaced. It was a gold crown from the 1970s that had worn out, so had to be cut and peeled off. First I got 4 numbing shots, then there was a lot of grinding to clean the old adhesive off and then application of those colored string things, then impressions, and finally a temporary until next week.
Had one fall out after having it completed. The dentist simply cleaned it and put it back in. Looking back big mistake. Dont think it was done right in the first place. Fast forward three years. Decay under and around crown. Two hours of removal and then back to have a new one to replace it. Cost me $1000 out of pocket. The first dentist had retired so no recourse. Good Luck.
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