| Services -
Orthodontics: Orthodontics for Adults |
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Have you
always wanted straight, even teeth? With
orthodontics, the dental specialty of aligning
(straightening) teeth, you can have your teeth
"remodeled" to produce the smile you've always
wanted. Why not choose braces to improve your
appearance and overall dental health? |
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| When Braces Are the
Right Choice |
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| Have you spent your life
guarding your smile or hiding your teeth behind your
hands? If so, braces (appliances) may change your
life. By improving the way your teeth fit in your
mouth, braces can help you feel less self-conscious
about laughing and talking around other people.
Braces may also improve your dental health by making
it easier to keep your teeth and gums clean. Braces
may even help make your bite more comfortable.
Orthodontic treatment takes only slightly longer for
adults than for children, and the results can be
just as satisfying. |
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| Can orthodontic
treatment do for me what it does for children? |
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| Healthy teeth can be moved
at almost any age. Many orthodontic problems can be
corrected as easily and as well for adults as
children. Orthodontic forces move the teeth in the
same way for both a 75-year-old adult and a
12-year-old child. Complicating factors, such as
lack of jaw growth, may create special treatment
planning needs for the adult. |
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| One in five orthodontic
patients is an adult. The AAO estimates that nearly
1,000,000 adults in the United States and Canada are
receiving treatment from an orthodontist. To learn
about correction of a specific problem, please
consult your family dentist or an orthodontist. |
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| How does adult
treatment differ from that of children and
adolescents? |
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| Adults are not growing and
may have experienced some breakdown or loss of their
teeth and bone that supports the teeth. Orthodontic
treatment may then be only a part of the patient's
overall treatment plan. Close coordination may be
required between the orthodontist, oral surgeon,
periodontist, endodontist and family dentist to
assure that a complicated adult orthodontic problem
is managed well and complements all other areas of
the patient's treatment needs. Below are the most
common characteristics that can cause adult
treatment to differ from treatment for children. |
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| No jaw growth: Jaw
problems can usually be managed well in a growing
child with an orthopedic, growth-modifying
appliance. However, the same problem for an adult
may require jaw surgery. For example, if an adult's
lower jaw is too short to match properly with the
upper jaw, a severe bite problem may result. The
limited amount that the teeth can be moved with
braces alone may not correct this bite problem.
Bringing the lower teeth forward into a proper bite
relationship could require jaw surgery, which would
lengthen the lower jaw and bring the lower teeth
forward into the proper bite. Other jaw-width or
jaw-length discrepancies between the upper and lower
jaws might also require surgery for bite correction
if tooth movement alone cannot correct the bite.
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| Gum or bone loss
(periodontal breakdown): Adults are more likely to
have experienced damage or loss of the gum and bone
supporting their teeth (periodontal disease).
Special treatment by the patient's dentist or a
periodontist may be necessary before, during and/or
after orthodontic treatment. Bone loss can also
limit the amount and direction of tooth movement
that is advisable. |
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| Worn, damaged or missing
teeth: Worn, damaged or missing teeth can make
orthodontic treatment more difficult, but more
important for the patient to have. Teeth may
gradually wear and move into positions where they
can be restored only after precise orthodontic
movement. Damaged or broken teeth may not look good
or function well even after orthodontic treatment
unless they are carefully restored by the patient's
dentist. Missing teeth that are not replaced often
cause progressive tipping and drifting of other
teeth, which worsens the bite, increases the
potential for periodontal problems and makes any
treatment more difficult. |
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| I have painful jaw
muscles and jaw joints - can an orthodontist help? |
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| Jaw muscle and jaw joint
discomfort is commonly associated with bruxing, that
is, habitual grinding or clenching of the teeth,
particularly at night. Bruxism is a muscle habit
pattern that can cause severe wearing of the teeth,
and overloading and trauma to the jaw joint
structures. Chronically or acutely sore and painful
jaw muscles may accompany this bruxing habit. An
orthodontist can help diagnose this problem. Your
family dentist or orthodontist may also place a bite
splint or night-guard appliance that can protect the
teeth and help jaw muscles relax, substantially
reducing the original pain symptoms. Sometimes
structural damage can require joint surgery and/or
restoration of damaged teeth. |
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| My family dentist said
I need to have some missing teeth replaced, but I
need orthodontic treatment first - why?
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| Your dentist is probably
recommending orthodontics so that he or she might
treat you in the best manner possible to bring you
to optimal dental health. Many complicated tooth
restorations, such as crowns, bridges and implants,
can be best accomplished when the remaining teeth
are properly aligned and the bite is correct. |
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| When permanent teeth are
lost, it is common for the remaining teeth to drift,
tip or shift. This movement can create a poor bite
and uneven spacing that cannot be restored properly
unless the missing teeth are replaced. Tipped teeth
usually need to be straightened so they can stand up
to normal biting pressures in the future. |
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| My teeth have been
crooked for more than 50 years - why should I have
orthodontic treatment now? |
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| Orthodontic treatment,
when indicated, is a positive step - especially for
adults who have endured a long-standing problem.
Orthodontic treatment can restore good function.
Teeth that work better usually look better, too. And
a healthy, beautiful smile can improve self-esteem,
no matter the age. |