by Aesthetic Dental Designs | May 23, 2026 | Full Mouth Restoration Guide
Every time you close your mouth, your lower jaw moves toward your upper jaw. Where it stops depends on a complex interaction between your jaw joints, muscles, and teeth. For people with healthy, well‑aligned teeth, the position where the teeth fit together comfortably...
by Aesthetic Dental Designs | May 23, 2026 | Full Mouth Restoration Guide
Full arch restorations replace an entire upper or lower arch of teeth. These prostheses face extraordinary mechanical demands: chewing forces up to 200 pounds per square inch on molars, parafunctional habits such as bruxism, and years of thermal cycling from hot and...
by Aesthetic Dental Designs | May 23, 2026 | Full Mouth Restoration Guide
Chronic jaw pain, headaches, facial muscle tension, and clicking or popping in the jaw joints are common among patients seeking full mouth reconstruction. The relationship works in both directions: existing temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disorders complicate...
by Aesthetic Dental Designs | May 23, 2026 | Full Mouth Restoration Guide
Full mouth reconstruction requires a level of diagnostic precision that traditional two‑dimensional x‑rays cannot provide. Standard dental radiographs flatten anatomy, distort measurements, and hide critical structures such as nerves, sinuses, and remaining bone...
by Aesthetic Dental Designs | May 23, 2026 | Full Mouth Restoration Guide
Losing one or more teeth creates a functional gap that affects chewing efficiency, shifts remaining teeth out of position, and accelerates bone loss in the empty space. Two common solutions dominate restorative dentistry: dental implants and fixed bridges. Both...
by Aesthetic Dental Designs | May 23, 2026 | Full Mouth Restoration Guide
A smile that has suffered from years of wear, multiple missing teeth, or a collapsing bite cannot be fixed with a single filling or a simple set of veneers. Full mouth reconstruction is a comprehensive, multi‑disciplinary process that rebuilds or replaces every tooth...