What is Dental Tooth Bonding?

Dental bonding is a treatment through which a dentist fixes a chipped, cracked, or otherwise broken tooth. Additionally, it helps extend a tooth shorter than the others and treat gaps between teeth. It involves applying and hardening a tooth-colored resin material (a durable plastic material) to the tooth with a special light to restore or enhance one’s smile. Our dentist may fix all dental issues with composite resin, an exceptionally resilient and adaptable dental bonding material. The viscosity of the composite resin is very thick and moldable before the dentist spreads it onto your teeth.

For the dentist, it makes shaping straightforward. Composite molding helps in following the curve of the rest of your tooth. It will make the final product look exceptionally realistic, and no one will even be able to tell that your teeth have teeth bonding.

How long does dental bonding last?

Oral hygiene habits considerably impact how long your dental bonding lasts. Avoid eating foods that are sugary or acidic since they can damage your teeth. Soon after eating fruit, brush and floss your teeth straight away to avoid giving plaque or bacteria a chance to form.

You should avoid chewing ice, hard sweets, grinding your teeth, and biting down too hard to further prevent the composite material from being harmed.

Of course, a regular, complete dental hygiene regimen is crucial. Your restoration will last longer if the natural tooth material surrounding the bonding is still healthy.

The Types

Adhesive and direct composite bonding are the two major dental bonding procedures. Let’s take a look at them in detail:

Adhesive Bonding

During this process, a restoration is attached to the damaged tooth using an adhesive, a curing light, an etchant, an acid, or another corrosive substance. The best candidates for this technique include non-metal fillings, porcelain veneers, and crowns.

Direct Composite

This dental bonding technique is the most popular. To match the color of your teeth, the dentist will produce a composite resin, shape it to fit them, and then apply it using a bonding agent. After exposure to a UV laser to cure the resin, the resin material gets hard, allowing the resin-bonded tooth to further get in shape.

Dental Bonding Process

Initial preparation

The treatment requires just low initial preparation. Unless the tooth needs drilling to adjust its shape, the chip is close to the nerve, or the bonding is filling a rotten tooth, anesthesia is frequently not required. For choosing a composite resin hue that closely resembles the shade of your teeth, our dentist will consult a shade guide.

Process of Bonding

The tooth will next have its surface roughened by our dentist, who will apply a liquid conditioner. These actions facilitate the bonding material’s attachment to the tooth. Resin that resembles tooth-colored putty is applied, molded, and smoothed to achieve the desired shape. The substance becomes rigid with a laser or light (typically blue). When the material has dried and become rigid, our dentist will further shape and polish it to match the rest of the tooth’s surface gloss.

Completion

The whole process of dental cosmetic bonding takes 30 to 60 minutes for each tooth.

Some dentists believe dental bonding is best suited for mild cosmetic modifications, for temporary treatment of cosmetic issues, and for fixing teeth in areas with extremely low biting pressure because of some of the restrictions of the procedure.

Advantages of the treatment

One of the simplest and least expensive cosmetic dentistry procedures is tooth bonding. A single appointment visit is typically necessary when only one tooth needs treatment, unlike custom tooth coverings like veneers and crowns, which need manufacturing in a lab.

Another benefit is that the least amount of tooth enamel removes as compared to crowns and veneers. Additionally, anesthesia is frequently unnecessary unless filling a cavity is the purpose of this treatment.

Disadvantages of the treatment

Bonded teeth are less stain-resistant than crowns. Compared to crowns, veneers, or fillings, bonding materials are neither as durable nor as strong. The materials can also fracture and chip away from the tooth.

Dental Bonding at Robert H. Thornton

If you have chipped teeth or gaps between teeth and want chipped tooth treatment or bonding for gaps you can contact us at our clinic. Our dentists provide the best dental services in Tupelo, for example, dental bonding for crooked teeth and tooth bonding. Our dental professional will examine your dental health and give you the most suitable treatment option.

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Monday – Wednesday: 8:00 am – 4:30 pm
Thursday:
8:00 am – 3:30pm