If you miss biting into a crisp apple or laughing without worrying about a gap, dental implants can feel like getting your old teeth back. They’re steady, natural-looking, and built to last—with the right care.
What Exactly Is a Dental Implant?
A dental implant is a small titanium (or zirconia) post that replaces the tooth root. After it bonds with the jawbone, we attach a connector (abutment) and a custom crown. The result looks and functions like a natural tooth. Implants can also support bridges or stabilize dentures.
Why People Love Implants
- Stability: Eat, talk, and smile without slipping or shifting.
- Bone health: Stimulation from the implant helps preserve jawbone volume after tooth loss.
- Tooth-friendly: Single implants don’t require shaping neighboring teeth, unlike some bridges.
- Longevity: With good hygiene and routine care, implants are a long-term solution.
The Process in Plain Language
- Assessment – We review your health, gums, and bone with 3D imaging.
- Placement – The implant is placed precisely in the bone (often easier than a tooth extraction).
- Healing – Over a few months, the implant and bone integrate.
- Restoration – A custom crown is attached for a seamless look and feel.
Some cases allow immediate temporaries the same day; others do best with a staged approach. Either way, comfort and predictability guide the timing.
Who’s a Good Candidate?
Most healthy adults qualify. We’ll look at:
- Gum health (gum disease must be treated first)
- Bone volume and density (bone grafting can help when needed)
- Lifestyle factors like tobacco use or uncontrolled diabetes (we’ll help optimize healing)
Caring for Your Implants
Brush, floss (or use implant-friendly flossers), and keep up with professional cleanings. Wear a nightguard if you grind. Treat the implant like a natural tooth—because it works like one.
Benefits Backed by Professional Sources
- Dental implants show high long-term survival and patient satisfaction when placed in healthy, well-planned sites (ADA; JADA summaries; Cochrane Oral Health).
- Implants help preserve alveolar bone by transferring biting forces into the jaw, reducing the resorption seen with missing teeth (NIH/NIDCR educational materials; peer-reviewed implantology texts).
- Compared with removable restorations alone, implant-retained solutions improve chewing efficiency and quality of life metrics (AAOMS/ADA consensus statements; systematic reviews).
Bringing It Together
When you want a replacement that looks great and feels solid, dental implants deliver—one tooth, several teeth, or a full arch. Planning is personal, but the payoff is universal: confidence.
If you’re considering dental implants and want a clear, personalized plan, contact Sonoma Springs Dental at 707-935-8200 or visit 17776 Sonoma Hwy, Sonoma, CA 95476 to book an appointment and get started.