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[personal profile] ppfuf
Damn. I had my twice-yearly dental cleaning this morning. My old dentist has moved to Washington. He left his practice to a new dentist (arg! he looks like he's 20!) who I saw for the first time today. He seemed pleasant, competent, thorough, and has small hands; something I appreciate in a dentist.
But being young, he's a techie and distrusting of old technologies. Apparently, some of my 20 year old dental work is no longer up to snuff. And I should get a one of those swanky new electric toothbrushes, and fancy new mouthwash. Sigh. I knew this day was coming, but I had been hoping to put it off a year or two. Actually, I do get to put some of it off until next year, as everything he wants to do is going to overrun my dental insurance's maximum output. The patient manager is going to call me this afternoon with a two-year plan. Maybe I'll just stay in denial and let the call go to voice mail. This is the sucky part of adulthood.

Date: 2010-06-04 09:44 pm (UTC)
ext_143250: 1911 Mystery lady (Default)
From: [identity profile] xrian.livejournal.com
I had a lot of dental work done when I was in junior high and high school by a dentist who at that time was close to retirement age. You can imagine how things have changed since then!

Yes, the electric toothbrush has been very much worth it for me. Using it steadily for two plus years has taken my gum health from borderline-dreadful to good, and it continues to improve. *AND* I have only had one new cavity since I started using it, and it was so superficial that the entire appointment to get it filled -- from the time I walked in the door till I walked out -- took 15 minutes.

I've also been through the experience of having a new dentist tell me I needed all sorts of stuff. I trust my current dentist, and this was his explanation: (1) A new dentist has often learned to treat things that a previous dentist never mentioned to you because they didn't have a good treatment for them. My "new" dentist told me I had several stress-cracks in my back teeth, which didn't used to be fixable, but are now, *and* are also much more preventable for the future. And (2) Your new dentist doesn't know your history, so they may see something that the previous dentist was "just keeping an eye on" because it was not immediately crucial and not getting worse, and think that it needs to be fixed right now. For instance, I have a tooth that was prepped for a crown about three years ago, and hasn't got a crown yet because the post and porcelain filling have apparently been holding up just fine. A new dentist might well see that three-year lifespan in my records and feel that it never should have been left incomplete so long. YMMV.

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