If you have lost a tooth or are about to, the next decision is usually between a dental implant and a bridge. Both work. Both look natural when they are done well. They are not interchangeable, and the right one for you depends on factors that an article cannot fully evaluate. What an article can do is lay out the trade-offs honestly so you walk into the consult with the right questions.
A dental implant is a titanium post that replaces the root of a missing tooth. It is placed into the jawbone, integrates with the bone over a few months, and is then restored with an abutment and a crown that looks and functions like a natural tooth. Nothing is attached to the neighboring teeth.
A dental bridge is a fixed restoration that replaces a missing tooth by crowning the two adjacent teeth and suspending a false tooth between them. The bridge is cemented in place. It is not removable like a denture.
Implants placed in healthy bone and maintained well have a very strong long-term track record. The general guidance in the literature puts 10-year implant survival in the mid-90% range for most patients. Bridges average closer to 10 to 15 years before they need replacement, sometimes more, sometimes less depending on the integrity of the supporting teeth.
When a tooth is lost, the bone that supported it begins to resorb. An implant transmits chewing force back into the bone the way a natural root does, which helps preserve bone volume. A bridge does not. Over the years, bone under a bridge typically continues to shrink, which can affect the look of the gum and the surrounding teeth.
An implant restores one tooth without touching the neighbors. A bridge requires crowning the two teeth on either side, which means removing healthy enamel from teeth that may not need any restoration of their own.
You floss around an implant the way you floss around a natural tooth. A bridge requires a different technique with a floss threader or a water flosser because the false tooth in the middle is fused to the two crowns on either side.
A bridge can usually be completed in two or three visits over a few weeks. An implant typically takes three to six months from placement to final crown because the bone needs time to integrate with the implant before the final restoration goes on.
Bridges generally cost less upfront than implants. Insurance often covers a meaningful portion of a bridge. Implant coverage is improving but varies widely by plan.
A bridge is a non-surgical option. For patients who cannot or prefer not to have a surgical procedure, a bridge may be a better fit even when an implant would be the technically ideal option.
If the teeth on either side of the missing tooth already need crowns for other reasons (large fillings, fractures, root canals), a bridge can be an efficient way to address all three needs at once.
When patients come in to talk through this decision, we look at six things.
Usually an implant. The neighboring teeth do not deserve to be crowned for no reason, and the aesthetic outcome of a well-placed front-tooth implant is hard to beat.
Often an implant, but a bridge can work well, especially if one of the neighbors is already a candidate for a crown.
Two implants supporting a bridge (an implant-supported bridge) is often the cleanest answer. It avoids resting the load on the natural teeth, and it preserves the bone in the middle.
We can sometimes do an immediate implant at the same visit as the extraction, which saves months. Whether that is appropriate depends on the bone and the infection status at the site.
The general sequence for a single implant in a patient with healthy bone is:
If a bone graft is needed at the same time as the implant, add a few weeks to a few months depending on the size of the graft.
The implant itself, meaning the titanium post in the bone, often lasts decades. The crown on top usually needs replacement at some point in the 10 to 20 year window depending on wear and grinding.
A typical bridge lasts 10 to 15 years. The lifespan depends heavily on the health of the supporting teeth and how well the patient cleans under the bridge.
Bridges are commonly covered at the same rate as a crown. Implant coverage varies. We check coverage for both options before you decide.
Most patients report mild soreness for a few days, comparable to a routine extraction. We discuss sedation options and pain management at the consult.
Yes, often. The bone may have shrunk in the time the site was empty, so a bone graft may be needed first. The CBCT tells us what is possible.
Articles can lay out the trade-offs but they cannot evaluate your bone, your bite, or your neighboring teeth. If you are weighing an implant or a bridge in Houston, a consult is the right next step.
Call (713) 522-1717 or book through our contact page. You can read more on our dental implants page and our dental bridges page.
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