Achieve a Winning Smile With Tooth Fillings

Achieve a Winning Smile With Tooth Fillings

Posted September 16, 2015 by Wager-Evans Dental

Winning Smile from Tooth Fillings Dental pain is no laughing matter. It can make enjoying your favorite foods feel impossible, and even your morning cup of coffee uncomfortable. But a cavity doesn’t have to get the final word or the win. Restorative treatment, such as simple tooth fillings, can help to restore your oral health once again, so that you can get back to dazzling the world with both your wit and your pearly whites! If you’re sick of dental discomfort keeping you on the sidelines, it’s time to see how a filling could help get you back in the game.

How to Cope With Cavities

Proper preventive care, including regular professional cleanings, can drastically reduce the likelihood that you’ll develop a cavity. But if you do have one, or develop one in the future, you should seek treatment immediately.

If you delay treatment, even if you’re not experiencing discomfort, the cavity is only likely to worsen, further jeopardizing your tooth’s structure and the rest of your oral health as well. That’s because your teeth cannot repair themselves the way other parts of the body can. Without dental care, your cavity will only get worse.

Prompt treatment for a cavity generally enables the restorative dentist to clean the area and apply a filling to help protect the tooth. This is a minimally invasive form of treatment which is highly effective, particularly for small cavities.

However, delayed treatment increases the likelihood of infection, which means instead of a simple dental filling to restore your tooth, you may need root canal therapy, or even an extraction.

Early warning signs of a cavity include discoloration, such as white areas which may mean the enamel has eroded, grey or black lines along a tooth, and sensitivity or pain, especially if it’s isolated to a single tooth. Remember, dentists recommend having a checkup and cleaning every six months, not only to prevent problems from developing, but also to treat any that have already arisen, such as a cavity.