What is a Dental Crown?
Dentists do whatever they can to save your natural teeth. That’s why filling cavities and even doing root canals are important: they protect as much of your teeth as possible. Dental crowns allow you to maintain the core of your teeth to preserve your jawbone and maintain your attractive smile.
When a tooth is severely damaged or the root of a decaying tooth must be removed, a dental crown allows you to maintain the tooth’s structure. Crowns can also be used to support a bridge and secure a dental implant by sitting on top of it. Visit your nearby dental team for long-lasting dental caps. Call Stamford Dental Arts for the best care in the most comfortable environment.

A dental crown is a cap placed on top of a damaged or broken tooth to strengthen and protect it. Well-made crowns are the same shape and color as your natural teeth, so no one but your dentist will know you have a crown. But if you prefer, you can get a gold or metallic crown. They are permanent since dentists cement them into place.Crowns, perhaps as old as dentistry itself, are an integral part of modern dentistry. The first record of gold dental crowns appears in Southeast Asia, about 2,000 BCE, on the Philippine island of Luzon. In fact, the Filipinos were flashing their gold teeth when the Spaniards arrived in 1571.

Despite being an ancient practice, the art and science of tooth crowns have continually evolved. Crown Why

Would I Need a Dental Crown?

Dental crowns are often required to repair and protect severely damaged teeth. Your dental crown dentist can fully restore your tooth by replacing its structure and regaining its strength with a dental crown. When making treatment recommendations, your dental specialist will assess a complex combination of clinical, social, and diagnostic factors. Their recommendations will be based on the patient’s assessment, perceived risks and benefits, personal preference, treatment cost, and clinical experience. The following are the most prevalent indicators for a dental crown:

  • Teeth that have had root canal therapy;
  • Heavily filled teeth;
  • Fractured, cracked, and worn teeth;
  • Teeth that have extensive decay and cannot be filled;
  • Cosmetic concerns, including uneven teeth, severe discoloration, overcrowding, etc;
  • Dental implants or bridges that need to be supported.

What Are the Different Types of Dental Crowns?
Crowns are typically placed over teeth following a root canal procedure and to serve as an anchor for a bridge. Crowns are a long-lasting method to preserve your existing teeth while maintaining their natural appearance. Our top dentist can create a dental crown out of a variety of materials. Among the most common are:
– Metal. Metal crowns have a long and successful dental history. Gold, palladium, nickel, titanium, and chromium are all excellent crown materials. They are durable and require minimal tooth removal before placement. Their strength and unnatural color, however, make them better suited for teeth in the back of your mouth.
– Zirconia. Considered a part of the titanium family of metals, zirconia has recently become a popular and effective material for dental crowns. The zirconia dental cap begins as a cube, and your dentist uses a computerized cutting machine to shape it for your tooth. During a single appointment, your dentist can measure, fit, and cement the crown into place.
– BruxZir. This solid zirconia crown is ideal for bridges, single tooth implants, onlays, and inlays. Prized for its strength and durability, the BruxZir crown’s disadvantage used to be its poor color matching. But they recently developed a shaded formulation that makes it more translucent and natural-looking. These crowns are also backed by a seven-year manufacturer warranty.
– Metal covered with porcelain. The porcelain cover matches the color of your teeth while maintaining the advantages of metal crowns. Unfortunately, the underlying metal can still show through, and the porcelain can chip off, revealing the metal. They are used by dentists on both front and back teeth.
– Pure resin. These crowns are inexpensive, but they tend to wear down quickly.
– Pure ceramic or porcelain. These tooth crowns are hypoallergenic and offer the best tooth color match. While they are an excellent choice for front teeth, they are not as strong as metal crowns and tend to wear down other teeth with which they make contact.
– eMax crowns. eMax crowns are a pure ceramic crown variant that is praised for its beauty, strength, and durability. The downsides of the eMax crown include a higher price tag and some brittleness when used on back teeth. They work best on your front teeth.
– Pressed ceramic. These crowns have porcelain caps and a hard inner ceramic core. They offer superior color matching and more strength than pure porcelain.

Stamford Dental Arts
44 Strawberry Hill Ave, Suite 1,
Stamford, CT 06902
(203) 504-8745
Web Address https://www.stamforddentalarts.com/

Our location on the map: https://goo.gl/maps/Y2YfWteR7rjhUzUT6

https://plus.codes/87H83F68+PM Stamford

Nearby Locations:
Ridgeway | Strawberry Hill | Glenbrook | East Side Of Stamford | Downtown
06905 | 06902 | 06906 | 06901, 06905

Working Hours :
Monday: 2:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Tuesday: 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Wednesday: 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Thursday: 8:00 am – 8:00 pm
Friday: 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Saturday: CLOSED
Sunday: CLOSED

Payment: cash, check, credit cards.