Oral Surgery

Oral Surgery

Oral surgery comprises specialized procedures performed on the teeth, gums, jawbones, and surrounding facial tissues. These interventions address complex conditions such as impacted teeth, jaw misalignment, dental implant placement, and trauma, usually after non-surgical options have failed.

A simple Extraction is a Routine, local-anesthesia procedure used by dentists to remove fully visible teeth above the gum line. Using instruments called elevators and forceps, the tooth is loosened and removed in one piece, allowing for a quick recovery with minimal soreness and swelling.

Surgical Extractions are specialized dental procedures used to remove impacted, broken, or complex teeth (such as those with curved roots) that cannot be accessed by simple pulling. Performed under local or general anesthesia, this procedure involves gum incisions, potential bone removal, tooth sectioning, and typically, suturing.

Bone Grafting is a surgical procedure that utilizes natural or synthetic material to rebuild or repair damaged bone, often following dental extraction, dental implants, gum surgeries. Graft material is placed into the graft site, often secured with membranes or screws, which acts as a scaffold for new bone growth and require about 3-6 months to heal.