Do more young people get dental implants compared to older people?

Doctor's Answers 1

Yes, young people get them quite often but for different reasons.

When you’re old, sometimes your immune system changes or you get gum disease just by the sheer length of time. You may have more lost teeth because you’ve lived a longer age.

But we get a lot of young people getting implants as well because maybe they’re born without teeth as a congenital defect where they just never had teeth so they want implants to replace it.

The other most common thing that we see in young people is that they cracked their tooth. They get smashed by a softball, they walk into a wall, they fall.

The tooth gets traumatised and needs to be extracted. So we do a lot of dental implants in younger people.

At the same time, if you’re too young, say you’re around 16 years old, we actually do not recommend dental implants.

Because once you put dental implants into the bone, it sticks to your bone, it fuses to your bone.

It’s not like teeth where you grow and your jawbone expands, with your teeth expanding with the jawbone.

Dental implants actually fuse -- and if you’re 16 years old and your face changes, what will happen is that if you put an implant too early when your face changes this implant gets left behind.

Let me give an analogy, say I’m 16 and my jaw is very small, then my implant will be stuck behind as the rest of my teeth move forward. It becomes very ugly.

We try to put implants in people that have stopped growing and that is a critical factor. So when you ask do we put dental implants in young people, we do if they have stopped growing.

Similar Questions

How do I know when I need dental implants?

I do a lot of root canal treatment and to make a natural tooth look good, especially your front tooth, is quite easy. To make a front implant look good is extremely difficult. You’ll need multiple surgeries, not only to place the implants but also to graft the gums and all that. If the patient is quite young, meaning in their 20s or 30s, our skeleton keeps growing so the rest of the teeth will keep moving down but the implant doesn’t move. So when you hit your 50s you’ll have this cosmetic problem that’s very difficult to fix.

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Answered By

Dr Jaclyn Toh

Dentist

Is taking oral bisphosphonates for more than 5 years an absolute contraindication to getting dental implants?

This is actually quite controversial. I think what you’re asking is if someone has osteoporosis and is taking the drug -- oral bisphosphonates are the drugs that actually prevent the bone from turning over. If you've been taking oral bisphosphonates for more than 5 years - I wouldn’t say it’s an absolute contraindication. There are some studies that actually show that if you stop it for a certain amount of time, the blood supply can actually return. But the thing is that no one actually knows, and if you look at the research no one actually knows how well it stops it.

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