Evaluating Your Options for Replacing Missing Teeth
Pick up most magazines or newspapers these days and you're likely to see an ad about dental implants. A clear understanding of the increasing options available for implant treatment is a good place to start together with alternative replacements for missing teeth
 and their economic impact. This article will educate you about the 
problems associated with tooth loss and why implants are considered the 
state-of-the-art tooth replacement system.Implants provide virtually the
 same function as natural teeth roots.
Dental Implants: The Optimal Tooth Replacement
Let's
 begin by taking a look at what makes implants the most optimal tooth 
replacement system today. An implant connection to the bone is different
 than how a tooth connects to the bone but it performs the same 
function. Dental implants act as substitute tooth roots in a unique way.
Implants
 actually stabilize bone and prevent the inevitable bone loss that 
occurs when teeth are lost. Commercially pure titanium, of which almost 
all current implant surfaces are made, has the unique property of being 
“osteophilic” (osseo-bone, philic–loving), thus joining biochemically to
 bone. Osseo-integration (osseo–bone,integrate–to join or fuse with) was
 discovered quite by chance and has revolutionized dentistry. The fusion is almost like a pillar in concrete, allowing no movement at all.
Stresses
 of biting forces are transmitted directly through implants to the 
bone—which they allow for very well. They provide virtually the same 
function as natural teeth roots, including stimulating the bone, thereby stabilizing it and preventing its loss.
