| A crown fits over the entire top of the tooth
above the gum line. Crowns cover, protect,
seal and strengthen a tooth. A crown is needed
when a filling
just will not work. A crown may be made of
gold, white porcelain, or porcelain fused
to gold. There are many situations that may
call for a crown: |
|
| Large decay.
If a tooth has decay so deep and large that
a filling
will not stay, or if the tooth structure is
weakened, a crown must be placed on the tooth
to save it. |
|
| Large old fillings.
When large old fillings break down, or get
decay
around them, they usually need to be crowned.
It is important to crown a tooth that has
been structurally weakened to prevent a cracked
or broken tooth. Once a tooth breaks, it may
not be possible to save it. |
|
| Cracked
tooth. When a tooth is cracked,
a filling
will not seal the crack. A crown has to be
placed over the tooth to hold it and the crack
together. If a crown is not placed on the
tooth, the tooth will become sensitive to
chewing pressure, or will eventually break.
It is important to crown a cracked tooth before
it breaks, because in some cases a broken
tooth cannot be crowned and must be extracted.
|
|
Broken
/ Fractured tooth. A tooth that
has broken is usually too weak to hold a filling.
A crown will hold the tooth together and prevent
it from breaking again. If the fracture involves
the nerve, Root
Canal Therapy may be required before
the tooth is crowned. In some cases, a broken
tooth cannot be saved and must be extracted.
| This patient chose not to have the cracked tooth
above crowned, and it later fractured. This tooth
had to be extracted because it cracked all the way
to the root. |
|
Sensitive
teeth. Teeth that are very sensitive,
either from a lot of "wear", or from receded gums,
sometimes require crowns to seal and protect the
teeth from hot and cold sensitivity.
Root
Canal Therapy. A tooth that has
undergone Root Canal Therapy will need a crown
to properly seal and protect the tooth. A tooth
with Root Canal Therapy is more brittle than a
tooth with a healthy nerve and blood supply. A
crown provides the necessary support to the tooth.
In cosmetic dentistry, crowns (sometimes
called "caps") are used less
frequently since the advent of veneers,
but in some cases a crown may be necessary for
a particular tooth. A tooth with a bad fracture
or a large filling
may be a candidate for a crown instead of a veneer.
| Before: This tooth has a large filling
as shown. A crown is needed on this tooth, instead
of a veneer, because there isn't enough natural
tooth left to support a veneer. A crown will cover
and protect the tooth, but will look the same as
a veneer. |
|
| After: The top teeth now have veneers,
except the one that had the large filling, which
now has a crown. |
|
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