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Pictures of Dentistry and Dental Procedures

The thousands of pictures on NYCdentist.com have been created for educational purposes
by Dr. Jeffrey Dorfman, Director of The Center for Special Dentistry.

Periodontal X-rays, bone loss xray - see Radiographs

Click on the small photos below to enlarge.
Image Photo Description
x-ray xray x-rays xrays radiographs  gums periodontal disease peridontics treatment periodontist gum Full mouth oral reconstruction of a dental phobia fear patient with severe periodontal gum disease. Top pictures and bottom x-ray. The initial visit. It is important to determine what teeth, if any, may be saved at least temporarily because it is easier for a patient to emotionally adjust to a temporary dental prosthesis that has at least some amount of retention provided by natural tooth abutments. An intra oral examination and careful review of the dental xray will help make that diagnosis. The teeth that were chosen to initially save were #6, 11, 22 and 28. The decision to fabricate a removable immediate partial denture, rather than a fixed lab-processed temporary dental bridge - our strong preference - was determined by the particular weakness of tooth #28. The patient was informed that the immediate prosthesis was to be used for the healing phase and that the four remaining abutments, particularly #28, might be subsequently extracted. Note that in this case we used a Panoramic x-ray rather than a full set of individual little x-rays because of the patient's dental anxiety and the severity of her dental disease.

 

 Information about these dental photos

     In medicine and dentistry "left" and "right" are based upon the orientation of the patient's body and not how they appear in a photograph of a smile.  For example, a reference to the upper left teeth will actually appear to be on the right side when viewing a picture of the face and similarly an upper right tooth will appear to be on the left side.

     Many words in dentistry like oral and mouth have a similar meaning and are frequently used together to help our readers find specific words they best understand.  This is particularly important because a majority of our visitors are from countries where English is not their primary language.  Maxilla or maxillary refer to the upper jaw.  Mandible or mandibular refer to the lower jaw.

     There are many other similar word combinations used throughout this website because our pages are read by patients and dentists.  A few of the most common are discussed here.  Tooth decay, tooth cavity and dental caries all mean the same thing.  Tooth, teeth and dental are also frequently interchanged as in teeth veneers or dental veneer laminate.  Oral rehabilitation and dental reconstruction mean smile makeover.  The word for x-ray may be used with or without a hyphen (this is true for other words too) and can also be called a radiograph.





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