Page 1 of 101 results
Astoria Dental & Denture
820 NE E St
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Astoria Dental & Denture: Miller Richard J DDS
820 NE E St
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Grants Pass Family Dental
824 Northeast A Street
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Alder Rob DDS
753 Northeast 7th Street
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Dr. Benjamin J. Armstrong, DDS
753 Northeast 7th Street
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Apple Family Dental: Tommerup Pete DDS
753 Northeast 7th Street
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Apple Family Dental
753 Northeast 7th Street
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Robinson Orthodontics
124 Northeast Evelyn Avenue
Grants Pass, OR 97526
Are you a little confused about which whitening method to choose? To count on a cheaper home remedy or to trust a specialist? Find out what produce the best effects! ... .
A dead tooth is a colloquial name for a tooth that does not have a nerve inside it because it was replaced by a dissolvable material during the root canal treatment. A tooth may also become dead due to caries. The shade of dead teeth usually become grey. Fortunately, they can be whitened as well. ... .
Can everyone wear braces? Unfortunately, some patients cannot. Why? Everyone would like to have white, healthy and straight teeth. Majority of us, when able to afford it, can straighten their teeth and eventually overcome complexes, which might have been disturbing us since our childhood. Straight teeth are important not only from the aesthetical point of view: malocclusions may cause a lot of diseases such as mobility or drifting of teeth, periodontal diseases or temporomandibular joint diseases. Moreover, ... .
Removable braces are usually used to treat not serious malocclusions in children who still have milk teeth. They also prevent the patients from worsening of the developing or already existing malocclusions. The greatest advantage of the removable braces is their low price. In comparison to fixed braces, the price of removable braces is really insignificant. ... .
Malocclusion means all dysfunctions of the tooth form and the incorrect relation between the teeth. There are genetic factors which condition the occurrence of malocclusion, nonetheless, it is most often an effect of bad habits in childhood. ... .