Comprehensive Care
Your oral health affects many aspects of your life, including your overall health. Smyrna Smiles offers family comprehensive dental care to every member of your family. We are here to help you improve the function and longevity of your smile and your quality of life.
Preventative Care
The American Dental Association recommends that you follow a schedule of twice yearly cleanings and exams. Early detection of dental problems is essential to gain optimal oral health. The best way to make sure your smile stays healthy is to maintain good oral hygiene and visit us for professional cleanings and exams.
Thorough Examinations
A comprehensive dental exam will be performed by your dentist at your initial dental visit.
Digital X-rays
When X-rays pass through your mouth during a dental exam, more X-rays are absorbed by the denser parts (such as teeth and bone) than by soft tissues (such as cheeks and gums) before striking the film. This creates an image on the radiograph. Teeth appear lighter because fewer X-rays penetrate to reach the film. Cavities and gum disease appear darker because of more X-ray penetration. The interpretation of these X-rays allows the dentist to safely and accurately detect hidden abnormalities.
How often dental X-rays (radiographs) should be taken depends on the patient`s individual health needs. It is important to recognize that just as each patient is different from the next, so should the scheduling of X-ray exams be individualized for each patient. Your medical and dental history will be reviewed and your mouth examined before a decision is made to take X-rays of your teeth.
The schedule for needing radiographs at recall visits varies according to your age, risk for disease and signs and symptoms. Recent films may be needed to detect new cavities, or to determine the status of gum disease or for evaluation of growth and development. Children may need X-rays more often than adults. This is because their teeth and jaws are still developing and because their teeth are more likely to be affected by tooth decay than those of adults.
Professional Cleanings
To eliminate harmful dental plaque and tartar buildup. This reduces your risk of developing dental decay and gum disease.
Fluoride Treatment
For decades, fluoride has been held in high regard by the dental community as an important mineral that is absorbed into and strengthens tooth enamel, thereby helping to prevent decay of tooth structures.
In nearly every U.S. community, public drinking supplies are supplemented with sodium fluoride because the practice is acknowledged as safe and effective in fighting cavities.
What Is Fluoride?
Fluoride is a compound of the element fluorine, which can found throughout nature in water, soil, air and food. By adding fluoride into our drinking water, it can be absorbed easily into tooth enamel, especially in children’s growing teeth, which helps to reduce tooth decay.
Sealants
Sealants are liquid coatings that harden on the chewing surfaces of teeth and are showing a great deal of effectiveness in preventing cavities—even on teeth where decay has begun.
The pits and grooves of your teeth are prime areas for opportunistic decay. Even regular brushing sometimes misses these intricate structures on the chewing surfaces of your teeth.
Adults are just as prone to tooth decay as children, and this inexpensive procedure will help avoid much more expensive problems in the future. We encourage all adults and children to have sealants on their molars.
Oral Cancer
For our patients’ peace of mind, we offer quick, non-invasive oral cancer screenings that take just a few moments.
Oral cancer is one of the most common cancers today and has one of the lowest survival rates, with thousands of new cases being reported each year. Fewer than half of all people diagnosed with oral cancer are ever cured.
Moreover, people with many forms of cancer can develop complications—some of them chronic and painful—from their cancer treatment. These include dry mouth and overly sensitive teeth, as well as accelerated tooth decay.
If oral cancer is not treated in time, it could spread to other facial and neck tissues, leading to disfigurement and pain.
Older adults over the age of 40 (especially men) are most susceptible to developing oral cancer, but people of all ages are at risk.
Oral cancer can occur anywhere in the mouth, but the tongue appears to be the most common location. Other oral structures could include the lips, gums and other soft palate tissues in the mouth.
At-Home Oral Care Education
Helps establish daily oral hygiene habits.
Occlusal Guard
Many patients tend to grind or clench their teeth in their sleep without realizing it. Common symptoms include waking up with a sore jaw and/or a dull headache. An occlusal guard helps minimize damage.