Bellingham Dentist

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Different Dental Fillings use Different Materials

What’s in Your Dental Filling?

Let’s look at the available dental fillings being used today by dentists. Knowing what they are, what they contain, and knowing their benefits can help you make informed choices.
You must have seen gold fillings before. Gold cast filling lasts from 10 to 15 years, even longer if you take very good care of them. Gold doesn’t corrode and has a high level of durability and strength, withstanding chewing and grinding pressures well.

Gold, however, is quite expensive, very noticeable, and out of date today. The filling is almost no longer used in restoration.

Silver amalgam fillings are as durable, strong as gold; able to handle the stresses of chewing extremely well. They last as long as gold and even longer than tooth-colored fillings. It is also one of the most affordable for strong fillings.

However, amalgam restorations are obvious in the mouth; it requires more tooth drilling and removal of normal tooth structure to accommodate it in a prepared cavity. Under extreme changes of temperature, the filling can also crack and break. And then there are also concerns with its mercury content, however minute.

Tooth-colored composites are naturally more pleasing having the same color as natural teeth. They are favored for the anteriors. They bond well with tooth structure and are useful to repair chipped or broken teeth. Compared to amalgam, composites do not last as long, typically 5 years, and are more expensive because tooth preparation takes longer to do and requires skill and experience.

Then there are ceramic fillings made of porcelain. They resist staining and last longer than composites, like up to 15 to 17 years, hence, making them fairly expensive. Glass ionomer fillings are favored for cavities below the gumline and for pediatric use because of its fluoride content. However, they need replacement every five years, not being as resistant to stresses.

Not just Your Dentist’s Recommendations

So what’s your filling going to be? Better know more from your Bellingham dentist. A host of factors need consideration, like how damaged are the teeth involved, allergy to certain materials, budget, and best long term advantage for you.

Snoring and Snore Guards at Tetrick Family Dentistry

Anti-snoring Devices: Pros and Cons

If you’re a snorer and in the market for anti-snoring devices, there are a couple of mouthpieces and a chin strap you can use to try to make night time easier for everyone. It’s good to arrest or minimize this tendency because of its potential danger to your health, especially if what you got is sleep apnea.

The CPAP or continuous positive airway pressure is the standard treatment for sleep apnea, a small bedside machine that sends air through a tube and a mask over your nose and mouth. It is quite uncomfortable for users, so that makes way for other alternatives, like an anti-snoring mouthguard.

There are two types of this mouthpiece, the older version is the jaw-retaining mouthpiece that pulls the lower jaw forward during sleep, and the newer and more studied tongue-retaining mouthguard which holds the tongue forward. This one is said to have a level of comfort and effectiveness.

One of the benefits of oral appliances is comfort; at least more comfortable than the bedside machine; then convenience, for one has to use it consistently. The other is effectiveness. The jaw advancement appliance works well with jaw-related causes of snoring, while the tongue mouthpiece works for almost everyone. There is no guaranteed solution really. But jaw pain and bite issues are associated with the jaw appliance. The anti-snoring chin strap comes in adhesive varieties, though most are of synthetic fabrics.

By moving the lower jaw forward it will reduce pressure on the throat and reduce constriction. Users who do not like to have any appliance in their mouths will find the strap comfortable. It does have one fault – it can slide off during sleep. Also, some designs can break apart because they use plastic clips, others may cause itching or skin irritation. So choose well according to your preferences, comfort and associated risks.

A Good Night No-Snore Device from Tetrick Family Dentistry

Dr. Tetrick can offer you any one anti-snoring device that works best for you. Consult with your Bellingham family dentist regarding snoring and know more how you can manage the condition effectively and safely.

Digital X-Rays in Bellingham Dentistry

ADA Digital X-Ray Recommendations

The American Dental Association (ADA) encourages all dentists and their patients to discuss their treatment options, including the need for X-rays, to be able to make informed decisions. Knowing the need for radiographic representations, the ADA and the FDA formulated recommendations to serve as guide when dentists make professional judgment regarding X-ray imagings.

These are not meant to be standards, requirements or regulations because dentists are in the best position to make the judgment, knowing their own patients’ history and vulnerabilities.

Although dental radiation is but a minor portion of total exposure from all sources, accounting for approximately 2.5 percent of the effective dose received from medical radiographs and fluoroscopies (half of which from CT scannings), the ADA nevertheless calls for careful and minimalist use of radiation in dental practice and only on the basis of need, not as routine.

It advocates use of the fastest image receptor available; use cone-beam CT (CBCT) only when necessary; collimate the beam to the area of interest; always use a thyroid collar/shield; and “child-size” the exposure time.

The National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP) have listed detailed Effective Radiation Doses for Dental Radiographic Examinations for adults, including occupational exposure for dental personnel, which limits should not be exceeded. Likewise, state laws and regulations set specific requirements for the use of ionizing radiation, including X-rays. Training requirements for dental office personnel typically are found in state dental practice acts or dental board regulations.

With all these safeguards from the ADA, the NCRP, and our state laws, the dental patient’s welfare is always foremost and supreme.

Bellingham Dentistry is Safe Dentistry

If you are concerned about radiation, it is good to know that here at Dr Tetrick’s in Bellingham, we practise safe dentistry using light exposure digital X-ray and only on a per need basis.

ADA Article Here

Crowns: Best Recommendations from Your Bellingham Dentist

The Advantages of Crowns

Crowns restore the function and aesthetics of the original tooth that is damaged or decayed. They protect the teeth and prevent sensitivity to outside elements, keep teeth from drifting or fill up a space between teeth. They also hold a bridge together and cover implants. Even if crowns are the most common restoration option to prolong a tooth’s life, it is not for every damaged tooth.

There are some indications crowns are your best options and, sometimes, the only viable option. A long crack in a tooth, especially if it extends to the gum line necessitates a crown. A tooth like this may split open and will definitely not heal by itself so a crown is your best option. Too large a filling can also endanger tooth integrity, weakening the walls and causing breakage.

If there is too much erosion or wear of the teeth’s top surfaces, common among teeth grinders or in those with frequent acid reflex, tooth material becomes soft and weak and unable to bear stress. Also, crowns are indicated in weakened teeth that have undergone root canal. Finally, there are pediatric cases where these are most helpful.

Bellingham Dentist: Crowns When You Need Them

Here at Tetrick Family Dentistry, our experienced dentists will tell you if crowns are not for you and will provide other helpful options. As in cases when the use of appropriate filling materials is sufficient to preserve and save the tooth, crowns are not necessary, or if a patient’s delicate health prevents the preparation for crowns. Crowns are common and have many advantages, but to be of optimal benefit for the individual patient they must be indicated for the condition.

Treating Hypersensitive Teeth at Tetrick Dentistry

What causes hypersensitive teeth?

If it happens that your teeth easily responds to heat or cold stimuli, even a touch or suction, there you experience an abrupt, transient discomfort or pain. More often, you will not mind it since the discomfort passes quickly. You can pick out which is the offending tooth and you just try to keep it out of the way of the stimulus. Well, it’s just not the way to handle the situation. Before it gets any worse or before the pain becomes a full-blown crisis, the wisest thing to do is see your dentist right away.

You may have hypersensitive teeth. Its most common causes are exposure of the roots because the gums have receded, and the other is exposure of dentin, which is the layer underneath the tooth’s enamel that has eroded. If your gums are no longer hugging your root surfaces, it might be due to harsh brushing or harsh toothpaste, or a chronic inflammation of the gums. If there is enamel erosion, the causes can be high acidic food intake, frequent bleaching, or smoking, any of which can soften enamel and expose your dentin. Dentin has numerous microscopic tubules that lead to the pulp, where nerves are present and are sensitive to outside elements.

Other common causes of tooth hypersensitivity are a cavity, a cracked or chipped tooth, or a recently place dental filling material. To determine how to resolve this is a visit to the dentist.

Care and Attention to Sensitivity

Your Bellingham dentists can identify or rule out any underlying causes of your tooth sensitivity. Depending on the circumstances, he might recommend desensitizing toothpaste, fluoride, bonding or root canal. Dr. Tetrick has seen many such cases of highly sensitive teeth. He will say that your teeth are trying to tell you what’s wrong and that you should not ignore the symptoms.

Finding a Family Dentist in Bellingham

Dentist Recommendation

A family dentist is considered the primary health provider in oral health, whose main concern is to maintain good dental hygiene and dental well-being. He is the first to see cavities, decay or swelling and the first to diagnose and give treatment. If you keep regular appointments with him and are faithful to his recommendations, you are more or less certain your oral health is in tip-top performance and may not need a specialist.

A family dentist sees patients in all age brackets – ranging from infants to the elderly. It would not be unusual for you to see young and old customers mix in his waiting room while the doctor switches styles to adjust to his particular patients. They make great public relations personas. If you are in the look-out for a good family dentist, check out your locality and ask around. You’d get first-hand experiences from relatives nearby or from neighbors and friends. Your dentist may have garnered a solid and favorable reputation through years of practice, and whose credentials are impressive.

If you have kids in the family or an elderly parent, go see your family dentist. Chances are, he might even be the dentist you’ve been seeing since childhood, as recommended by your dad or mom. That dentist might be seeing your entire family and it’s good to have a friend like that close by.

Family Dentist in Bellingham

The practice has been around many years and is beloved by the community. The expertise and warmth of Dr. Gary Tetrick and Dr. Jill Tetrick and their bevy of affable staff tell you there is no need to look further than Tetrick Family Dentistry in Bellingham.

The Perils of Smoking to Dental Health

All types of Smoking are Risky

A smoker’s unmistakable breath is just one of the signs of this addiction to nicotine. Fumes cling to tooth surfaces, on the tongue, the hard palate, the sinuses, and the soft moist lining of the mouth. If it goes unabated, not even regular brushing and flossing routines can keep the effects of smoking at bay.

Among other things, a smoker’s dentition is the color of yellow to darkish yellow, even brownish; there’s buildup of plaque and tartar that leads to cavities formation, swelling and discoloration of gums, loss of bone in the jaws, and blockage of salivary gland openings. Smokers are difficult cases for implant procedures due to brittleness of their jaw bones, and for surgical procedures like extraction, periodontal treatment, or oral surgery because their wounds do not heal easily. Furthermore, smokers are at a higher risk for oral cancer.

Just like smoking cigarettes, those who indulge in pipe-smoking and cigars face the same risks and oral health problems, in particular, loss of bone in the jaws, loss of teeth, gum disease and throat cancer. And don’t think that smokeless tobacco is safer. These products, either inhaled or chewed, are loaded with many different cancer-producing chemicals, have higher levels of nicotine than regular cigarettes, and are irritants to the mouth’s soft tissues and the teeth’s enamel.

Consider also that your risks for developing these harmful effects is proportionate to how long you’ve been in the habit, how many sticks consumed per day, and how deeply the fumes are inhaled. There is just no way you can beat the odds if kicking the habit doesn’t happen sooner.

Bellingham Dentistry and the Smoker Patient

The Tetrick’s dental practice has seen a lot of smokers as patients and have treated many smokers’ dental issues. While quitting the habit is more a medically consulted issue, we at Dr Tetrick’s are willing to help patient’s committed pursuit to regain oral health if so desired.

Getting Serious with Sleep Apnea

Risk of Sleep Apnea

Sleep apnea affects 18 million Americans alone, like 1 n every 15, or about 6.6% of the population. It is described as stoppage of breathing while asleep, from 10 to 30 seconds per night to upwards of 400 seconds in severe cases. Each time, your brain is deprived of small amounts of vital oxygen. You might not be aware of the condition, but some advanced cases see waking up every 30 seconds per episode during the night. Sleep apnea is a chronic condition and a progressive one as well; it gets worse over time.

While sleeping, the soft tissue in the back of your throat collapses and blocks your air passage. It’s called obstructive sleep apnea. The less common type is central sleep apnea where no air blockage occurs but your brain seems to fail to send signals to the muscles to breathe. It affects, predominantly, over 40 males who are overweight and with larger neck circumferences. Apart from a family history of sleep apnea, sufferers may also have large tonsils and tongue, and a small jaw bone. Other risk factors are presence of a reflux disease or some type of nasal obstruction.

While sleep apnea undermines a lot of day activities, such as work and school activities resulting to poor performance and work and vehicular accidents, the threat to overall health is more than alarming. Statistics show the relationship of sleep apnea to a host of health issues, as depression, hypertension, diabetes, heart failure, heart attacks, and strokes.

Bellingham Dentistry Treats Sleep Apnea

Bring anyone in your family who you believe is at risk for sleep apnea to the Tetrick Dental Clinic in Bellingham. Dr. Gary Tetrick, longtime dental practitioner of Bellingham with a Doctorate in Dental Surgery, is also a member of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. He is your expert professional in Bellingham for sleep apnea.

Don’t think Extraction Yet. Consider Root Canal

When Do You Need A Root Canal?

Root Canal Treatment, or just Root Canal, is the option preferred for saving a natural tooth in distress. Toothache signals that there is inflammation or infection in the pulp, that living component inside the tooth that goes down to the roots. Rich in nerves and blood supply, the pulp succumbs to bacterial infection and decays, leaving no option for it than to be taken out. Otherwise, the infection can destroy the entire tooth, spread to the surrounding soft tissue and bone.

It is not only pain that signals pulp distress, but sensitivity to heat or cold, tenderness when chewing or touching, discoloration of the tooth, swelling of the gums in the root area. Sometimes there is no pain at all. Beginning cavities and old, large fillings can give signals of pulp condition.On the other hand, there are cases when a root canal is not indicated, like in teeth with severely fractured roots, or if the tooth is already wobbly or loose in its socket, not having enough bone support.

Properly called endodontic treatment, it involves removal of the pulp all the way to the roots, the chambers cleaned and disinfected, and then filled and sealed with a rubber-like material (called gutta percha). If there is still tooth material left, it can be restored with filling material or with a crown to offer protection. You have saved the tooth and it is looking as natural as the rest.

Having Root Canal in Less Time at Bellingham

It cannot be stressed enough how important are regular dental visits. Here at Dr. Tetrick’s, our dental practice is geared more towards prevention. Every visit is a thorough oral examination to assess your oral health. If not extraction, should root canal be the option for you, rest assured that your Bellingham dentists’ modern techniques and facilities will get this otherwise lengthy procedure done in less time than most.

Saving your Smile from Periodontal Disease

Why Periodontal Disease is not a pretty picture

Periodontal disease is a chronic form of an otherwise preventable and simple gum inflammation. A redness, swelling and tenderness of the gums most times are not bothersome or painful and, hence, you are likely not to mind it at all. If you are too busy to go for dental visits also, you are likely to miss being diagnosed and proper treatment is delayed.

Gingivitis soon escalates into its chronic form and tell-tale signs of periodontal disease starts to appear. Statistics show that almost half of Americans will have the disease by the age of 30, and given that the condition increases with age, we are looking at more people with periodontal disease in their maturing years. Bacterial invasion leading to plaque formation, leading to tartar build-up are making teeth and gums more difficult to clean. Unbeknownst to you, the invasion has reached under the gums and that initiates gingivitis. By the time chewing becomes painful, teeth start to move in their sockets, and gums are pulling away and exposing roots, you are having a full-blown periodontal disease. Remember that this condition is a disease of the gums, and not of the teeth.

Apart from poor oral hygiene, dry mouth and smoking, aggravated by diabetes, heredity, or AIDs, compounded with old dental fillings and ill-fitting dentures, the patient may still find hope with a committed attitude to change and better manage his condition.

Periodontal Care in Bellingham

We at Tetrick Family Dentistry are just as committed to all periodontal cases who commit themselves to expert, proper, and state-of-the-art treatment for this condition at our dental center. The sooner you start with our periodontal care, the sooner we can save your teeth and your smile.