The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

DENTAL CARE

- Jeffrey Gross, DDS, FAGD

Q: I Want To Be Able to Eat. . .

A: and I want it to be cheap!” Those were the opening words of my patient this week with the exclamatio­n point. This visit from this patient was not the first. I saw him previously as we prepared him for open-heart surgery. Often, cardiac surgeons send a patient to a dentist for clearance before a procedure. Oral infections are very severe. These infections can and do get into the bloodstrea­m. The results of this spread will be devastatin­g on a patient after heart surgery. It could even result in a loss of life.

My patient was one of those people that I see under that circumstan­ce. His mouth was a mix of infections and broken teeth. Due to the urgency of his surgery, we did not have time to do the entire treatment plan that we discussed. Our strategy involved removing all of his teeth and making him a denture. I had time to remove all of the teeth, but making a proper denture was not possible in the timeframe that he gave me. My other choice involved removing all of the teeth and leaving him with nothing until after rehab. That approach was less than ideal due to a lack of cosmetics and impaired eating function.

I decided to leave a couple of back teeth for chewing and some front teeth. The front teeth served a dual function. For the patient, they presented a level of dignity. For me, they gave me a guide to creating a denture with similar size and position of teeth. Leaving front teeth makes the possibilit­y of “denture shock” less likely. What is “denture shock?” This phenomenon occurs when the look of the denture is drasticall­y different than the patient’s original teeth. Leaving a few teeth until the very end precludes this problem from happening.

He and I agreed upon the plan a couple of months ago before the heart surgery. This week he came to me to finish the case. However, he changed his plan. He did not want to remove any more teeth. The teeth that I had left were not diseased. He no longer wanted to wear a full denture and wanted to use the remaining few teeth as anchors. I can make a partial denture with as little as two teeth. However, not all “two teeth” are created equally. The position of the teeth in the mouth will make or break a treatment.

He had more than two teeth, but the spacing was not ideal for a partial denture success. An entire side of his mouth of devoid of teeth. The replacemen­t teeth that I would make for him would not stay in place without some aid for stability. The only way for him to wear his new partial denture would involve the use of a dental adhesive. I never want to do a case with adhesive as a must from the beginning. Even with the adhesive as an aid, I could not tell him that he would be able to eat. He was willing to take the chance. I was not in favor of this plan as I felt it was doomed to failure.

I offered him a backup plan. I agreed to make an upper partial denture with the qualificat­ion that if we found problems, I could add an implant to make his treatment successful on all fronts. I do not have to start from scratch and throw away the partial denture. I can retrofit an implant into an existing partial or full denture. He and I came to a meeting of the minds and were both happy.

You don’t have to live with a sloppy fitting tooth replacemen­t. There are many ways to turn disaster into success. Please call me at 440.951.7856 and set up a visit as a start to ending your problem. I look forward to meeting you.

Jeffrey Gross, DDS, FAGD is an Ohio licensed general dentist and is on the staff of Case Western Reserve School of Dental Medicine.

The Healthy Smile 34586 Lakeshore Boulevard (¼ mile west of Route 91 on Lakeshore Blvd) Eastlake, Ohio 44095 440-951-7856 Severance Medical Arts, Suite 603 5 Severance Center Cleveland Heights, Ohio 44118 216-371-2333 www.jeffreygro­ssdds.com

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