• How long do crowns and bridges last?
By maintaining a clean mouth with good oral hygiene, your fillings, crowns, and bridges will last much longer. Decay and gum disease caused by poor oral hygiene are the major cause of a restoration's failure.
Take special care when eating hard foods such as candy or ice. These hard foods can easily crack natural teeth as well as crowns or bridges.
Sugar, especially when coupled with poor oral hygiene, can often lead to decay and failure of a crown or bridge. Avoid sugar in your diet.
Always wear a mouthguard when playing rough sports.
If you take good care of your teeth, both your natural teeth and your crowns and bridges will last you a long time. In general, crowns and bridges have an expected lifespan of about 10-15 years. In a very healthy mouth, the lifespan is often much longer than that. Some crowns and bridges last 20-30 years, and some an entire lifetime. The life of a crown also depends on the condition of the tooth before the crown was placed.
• Do you offer nitrous oxide (laughing gas)?
• Do I need to continue taking my antibiotics even though I'm feeling better now?
If you haven't finished your antibiotic course, the infection may now be under control, but it is not necessarily gone. The part of the infection that was eliminated with the initial dose of antibiotics was the most susceptible bacteria (the bacteria that were easy to kill). If you stop taking the antibiotics before ALL the bacteria are killed, the ones that are left (the stronger ones) can cause the infection to re-grow ("blow up"). But this time, since the infection is made of stronger, more antibiotic-resistant bacteria, the infection will be worse and antibiotics may no longer work.
• Why do amalgam (silver) fillings contain mercury?
Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature, and the only chemical that can cause the hardening reaction for amalgam fillings. After the reaction is complete, no liquid mercury remains. The mercury becomes chemically bound and trapped in solid form.
• Is the mercury in amalgam fillings harmful to me?
Studies show that some mercury is in fact released from amalgam fillings. Most of this occurs when the filling is still fresh. However, the amount of mercury released from amalgam fillings is quite small. In fact some reports say that the amount of mercury you consume every day from eating and breathing is more than that released from amalgam fillings.
The official answer is that mercury in amalgam fillings is safe. Please read our fact list on the Amalgam page, and read this article at Quackwatch.
• Should I replace my silver fillings with white fillings or porcelain?
The answer is almost always YES. Much improvement in health and aesthetics can be achieved with white fillings or porcelain. But the reason has nothing to do with mercury. It has to do with temperature and bacteria. Please read our Amalgam page for a detailed explanation.
If your reason is due to the mercury scare, then it's probably not necessary to change your fillings. Here's a relevant article at Quackwatch. But if your silver fillings are older than 10 years, then they need to be changed for health reasons. And of course, if you want to improve the beauty of your smile, then changing them is a good choice.
If the silver fillings are small and shallow, they can generally easily be changed to white fillings. If the silver fillings are large or deep, then they best be replaced with porcelain.
We can always give you better answers in-person having seen your teeth and fillings.
• How are instruments sterilized?
The sterilization efficacy is monitored with spore tests to verify sterility to OSHA and hospital surgical standards. Each sterile pouch also has a sterility sensor on it to demonstrate that the package has been sterilized.
Rest assured that our protocol is rock solid. In all our history, not once has there been a mixup or an incident of infection transfer or even potential infection transfer. There are no "cracks in the system," and no instrument could ever be confused with a non-sterile one.
• Why do I need a crown after my root canal?
There are other reasons too:
Root canal treated teeth are vulnerable to fracture. Also, root canal treated teeth often discolor over time. A crown will protect the tooth and prevent hide discoloration, maintaining a beautiful and healthy tooth.
• What is the DMFS?
Please email us if you have additional questions. We'll do our best to answer you and add the question to this page.


