Laser Dentistry

Laser dentistry is a revolutionary way of administering Dental Care.

Laser dentistry offers a highly effective alternative to painful and noisy drilling procedures. Lasers can now be used to perform a variety of functions, including cavity removal, tooth restoration, and periodontal surgery.

Dental lasers can also remove plaque and dental decay from a cavity-affected tooth, preparing it for a filling. A laser beam can also help harden bonding material. Laser Dentistry can in some cases effectively reshape gums, remove excess or affected gum tissue in gum disease sufferers, and remove bacteria from between diseased gums and teeth.

What Are The Benefits Of Laser Dentistry?

There are currently four areas of dental care that are enjoying the benefits of laser dentistry:

  • Cavity removal can be accomplished with dental lasers. The laser has the ability to remove decay within a tooth, and prepare the surrounding enamel for bonded fillings. The need for anesthesia is greatly reduced or eliminated over the traditional methods.
  • Curing, or hardening bonding materials is another area where dental lasers have become important. The laser drastically reduces the time it takes to finish a filling and create what some researchers have shown to be a stronger dental restoration.
  • Whitening teeth can be accomplished with special solutions that are applied to the tooth surface in the dental office and activated by laser energy. Color changes of several shades is possible in a very short time. When combined with at-home tray based whitening systems, dramatic changes can be seen in even the most difficult cases.
  • Laser Dental Procedures:
    • Frenectomy
    • Depigmentation
    • Vestibuloplasty
    • Gingivoplasty
    • Pocket Disinfection
    • Operculectomy
    • Gingival Enlargements
    • Bleaching/Tooth Whitening
  • Periodontal, or gum related care is the fourth area benefiting in some cases from dental lasers. Laser dentistry is currently used for recontouring or reshaping gums, removing extra or diseased gum tissue associated with the use of certain medications or periodontal disease, and removing the bacteria in periodontal pockets to promote healing. Healing time and post operative discomfort can be significantly reduced over the traditional surgical methods.

Sensitive Tooth

Do you have sensitive teeth?

Tooth sensitivity also known as dentin hypersensitivity — affects the tooth or exposed root surfaces. This occurs when the enamel that protects our teeth gets thinner, or when gum recession occurs, exposing the underlying surface, the dentin, thus, reducing the protection the enamel and gums provide to the tooth and root.

Tooth sensitivity affects up to 57% of the population