My new dental implant has been hurting ever since it was put in. Today the implant fell out of my mouth, and Im noticing that it is not straight. It is on quite an angle. Is it abnormal to install implants on an angle? Might that be why it was hurting? I had implants before and I had no problem. Also, I only went in three times this time. I have gone in 12 times. I went with a different dentist this time since I moved. Any help be appreciated, thanks
I had 8 crowns installed across the top - including an implant crown on #7. I don't like the way the #7 crown looks or feels. It protrudes more than the #9 tooth,feels thicker and longer.. I've been told that the implant was placed on an angle rather than straight. The lab had to retool their equipment to make the crown so it could be screw retained - and now my dentist tells me I will need a special tool if I move away or need care away from him. Do I need to have implant redone?
I have been told that at least my two front teeth needs root canals done due to the angle they are at to each other and it's impossible to clean so they have a large cavity. My teeth on each side of the front are also misaligned and damaged. My canines stick out further than the others and makes my whole smile look horrible. I was told braces weren't an option without surgery to correct my lower jaw. How can I fix my front 6 teeth without spending thousands.
I had tooth 45 implanted 10 days ago, the dentist made nearly 40 degree angle in and the implant very close to tooth 44 root from x ray. I feel the tooth 44 root area pain until today. I would like to know if the implant hurt tooth 44 root and need to take out or not?
This causes me some worries. Could this have future complications in any way? What impact can it have? When I start to bite on it, can the pressure on the implant cause the implant move towards the next tooth's root or lead to implant being loose?
I was told ( as an option) that in order to avoid a sinus lift in tooth #3 the implant could be placed in an angle ( between #3 and #4( extracted) approximately at 45 degrees as shown in sketch below. Then the abutment would be placed in a vertical position. I'm concerned of the distribution of forces may place an angular momentum or torque on the implant. I was told the bone does not care. Does anybody see a problem with this? Does anyone have experience with this?