#16
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Buy and use a water pic. I wish I had one and started using it when I was twenty. Pressure cleaner for the mouth. And I brush and floss too, beforehand, but there's still a bunch of junk the water pic flushes out.
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It's not a new bike, it's another bike. |
#17
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Yes, finished an implant/crown process in June, that started last august, on my #10 lateral incisor. Sucked. But finished product seems solid.
Process went like this for me: Extract old tooth and add bone graft, let heal for 3-4 months, check bone density with 3d xray, install implant, let heal for 3-4 months, actually more like 5, uncover the implant (another incision), Install temporary crown while gums heal, let that go for 1 or so months. Then install final permanent crown. Whole shebang, because of the timing cost me much less because it was spread over 2 years, and dental insurance reset January 1. So, all in all, less out of pocket than they quoted me initially.
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And we have just one world, But we live in different ones |
#18
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I've had three done at an NYC dental school and couldn't be happier with the price and the work. In my case, they weren't students, they were residents and they were trying to impress the attending (I assume) so they were extremely thorough. Other dentists have complimented their work. And the price, as I recall was $1800 a tooth including the crown but no rebuilding. Or, do as my sister did. She got a quote from her local dentist and then got a quote from a nearby dental school. She then went to her local and told him that she would prefer to use him but he had to come close to the price. The local reduced his prices to a point where she was happy. One thing, as with any teaching hospital, spring is the best time to get elective procedures done. Residents turn over on July 1. The resident you get in July will have a couple of weeks under his/her belts but will be a grizzled vet in the spring.
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Natural Born Domestique |
#19
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close to 6k per tooth here.
I have found out due to a 25 year-old bridge that has failed. it's one of those things...you hate the idea of spending that much, but the alternative of getting a denture of some kind is not what I want to do. Sent from my SM-G935W8 using Tapatalk |
#20
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I had a very bad bike accident in 1994 and had to get a whole bunch of teeth replaced. Four implants and rebuilding my jaw with hip bone ended up being like $25k back then. So to me the price doesn't sound out of whack based on long outdated experience. They've lasted well and given very few problems - the teeth part have worn and broken a couple of times but the implants have not had any major issues.
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#21
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Quote:
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It's not a new bike, it's another bike. |
#22
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I was hit by a car a few years ago, broke my jaw on both sides, sheared off two teeth at the gum-line, fractured a number of upper rear teeth diagonally through the tooth.
The two that were sheared off at the gum had to be extracted, then I had implants - two of, first the plugs with plugs for a number of months for the bone to adhere fully and then the ti/ceramic teeth themselves bolted into place. This would have cost around £2,600/tooth if I was paying for it privately, but because I was knocked off my bike, breaking off two teeth which were in perfect condition before hand the local hospital did both for free. If I'd allowed them to rot then this would not have been an option. I paid the NHS rate for the rest of the work - which was substantial in quantity, but the cost was reasonable, which was lucky as I was not on a huge wage at the time. The implants have been rock solid ever since, no pain during fitting or afterward, very happy with them - the only thing I'll note is that when I had the titanium plugs in place for those couple of months and was cycling in the cold with my mouth open the cold could strike down through them into your jaw - instant ice-cream headache. Now they're coated with ceramic that problem no longer exists. |
#23
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The price of a dental implant is given, first of all, by the doctor's experience who puts the dental implant.
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#24
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Working on #3 now, having the tooth put in next week. All of mine have been routine, no issues, and about $5k apiece. I had different insurance on each one.
First one - I was working, good plan paid half out of pocket Second - retired, lousy plan, paid all of it Third - better plan, think I'm paying around half It's a chunk of cash that really stings, that's for sure. The end result is quite nice, though. |
#25
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I have an ortho in Westchester and in London. They both do great work. The price is inline with what they charge.
I think good oral health impacts positively both your physical health and your mental health. It is money well spent. |
#26
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Not to derail, but what insurance are retired US folks using that cover periodontal and implants?
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#27
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Ugh, I broke a tooth yesterday. They did a temporary fix but I'm scheduled for a crown next month. I wonder what that will cost.
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#28
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I have two. Yep, about $5K each for everything. Cha-ching, budda-bing. I probably wouldn't have gotten #2 but it was toward the front and I would've looked like that hillbilly from DELIVERANCE without it.
Last edited by Jeff N.; 02-23-2022 at 03:25 PM. |
#29
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I've got a couple implants. I try and spread the implant and crown across 2 different years, that way I can use as much of my FSA account as possible for each.
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#30
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I have 4 implants and that price is in line with my most recent one.
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