
Dental surgery plays a crucial role in restoring and maintaining optimal oral health
Tooth Extraction

In most cases, we try to preserve as much natural tooth material as possible. However, there are times when one or more teeth must be removed for the sake of your oral health. A tooth extraction is a dental surgical procedure where a tooth is removed from its socket.
Why You Might Need An Extraction
- Injury
- Severe decay
- Impacted wisdom teeth
What Are The Benefits Of An Extraction?
While you might think removing a tooth is a bad thing, it can have many benefits, with the most noticeable being a reduction of pain. It also gives you the opportunity to replace your decayed or damaged tooth with a realistic, durable, and fully functional restoration, such as a bridge or dental implant.
Bone Grafts
Bone grafts help to reinforce the dental bone that’s responsible for stabilizing your teeth. Since bone loss is a natural problem anytime a tooth is removed, bone grafts help counteract the natural resorption (shrinking) that happens in your jaw once a tooth is missing.

A dental bone graft is a procedure performed to increase the amount of bone in a part of the jaw where bone has been lost or where additional support is needed. Bone may be taken from elsewhere in the body and surgically fused to existing bone in the jaw. Sometimes, synthetic bone material is used. Bone grafting can successfully rebuild bone in areas where it is deficient, ensuring there is enough healthy bone for dental implant treatment. Another reason for having bone grafting is to help improve the overall aesthetics of treatment.