DENTAL BRIDGES

Professional dental care tailored to your needs

Dental bridge — fixed replacement for missing teeth

A traditional dental bridge uses crowns on the teeth beside a gap to support one or more replacement teeth (pontics) in between. The result is cemented in place — not removable like a partial denture — so it can feel stable for chewing and speaking. We evaluate your bite, gum health, and abutment teeth to design a bridge that looks natural and functions comfortably.

Understanding dental bridges

Bridges can be made from ceramics, zirconia, or porcelain fused to metal depending on span length, bite forces, and esthetic needs. The abutment teeth must be strong enough to support the extra load; sometimes they need treatment or reinforcement first.

The process resembles multiple crowns: preparation, impressions or digital scans, a temporary bridge if appropriate, then cementation of the final bridge when the lab work returns. We verify contacts, floss access, and bite so the restoration feels balanced.

In some cases an implant-supported bridge is an alternative when adjacent teeth are healthy and you prefer not to prepare them — we compare options, costs, and timelines.

Home care is essential: brush and floss under the pontic using floss threaders, superfloss, or a water flosser as we demonstrate. Regular exams catch decay at margins or gum issues early.

What your bridge treatment may include

Consultation & bite analysis

Evaluation of missing teeth, abutment health, spacing, and whether a fixed bridge is appropriate.

Traditional fixed bridge

Crowns on supporting teeth linked to one or more pontics to fill the gap — cemented as one unit.

Material options

Ceramic, zirconia, or porcelain-fused-to-metal depending on span, esthetics, and strength needs.

Abutment preparation

Shaping anchor teeth to receive retainers while preserving as much structure as safely possible.

Impressions or digital scans

Precise records so the lab builds a bridge with correct contacts and emergence profile.

Temporary bridge

Protects prepared teeth and maintains appearance while the final bridge is fabricated.

Implant-supported bridges (when applicable)

Alternative when multiple adjacent teeth are missing or you wish to avoid preparing natural teeth.

Bite equilibration & hygiene coaching

Balancing occlusion and teaching cleaning under the pontic.

What to Expect

1

Planning visit

X-rays, photos, and discussion of bridge design, alternatives, and cost.

2

Tooth preparation

Prepare abutments; address any decay or buildups needed for retention.

3

Records for the lab

Impression or scan and shade selection for natural-looking pontics.

4

Temporary phase

Wear the provisional bridge while the definitive restoration is made.

5

Final cementation

Try-in the bridge, confirm fit and bite, then bond with long-term cement.

6

Follow-up & maintenance

Recall visits to monitor gums, margins, and wear on the bridge and opposing teeth.

Frequently Asked Questions

A bridge is fixed and cemented; a partial is removable. Bridges can feel more stable for eating but require preparation of abutment teeth. Partials may spare tooth structure but need nightly removal and cleaning.

With good hygiene, many bridges last a decade or more. Risk factors include decay at margins, gum disease, grinding, and diet. Regular exams help extend service life.

Modern ceramics can match neighboring teeth closely. Shape and shade are selected with your input so the pontic blends with your smile line.

Use floss threaders, superfloss, or interdental brushes; a water flosser can help. We demonstrate a routine that fits your bridge design.

Decay at the crown margin can jeopardize the bridge. Early detection with exams and X-rays is key — sometimes the bridge must be removed and remade if damage is extensive.

Yes — implants or implant-supported bridges can replace teeth without crowning healthy neighbors when you are a candidate. We compare benefits, timelines, and investment.

Is a bridge right for you?

We consider the number of missing teeth, condition of abutments, bite forces, and your goals. If anchor teeth are heavily compromised, implants or a removable option may be safer long term.

Our recommendations balance cosmetics, longevity, and preservation of natural tooth structure.

Protecting your investment

  • Keep gum tissue healthy — inflammation can undermine abutment support.
  • Avoid chewing very hard foods on the pontic if we advise caution for your material.
  • Wear a night guard if you clench or grind.
  • Do not use teeth to open packages or bite nails.
  • Schedule professional cleanings on the interval we recommend.

When to seek help

Looseness, rocking, food trapping, bad odor, or pain when biting warrant a visit — early intervention can often save a bridge from total failure.