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inglor_cz 14 hours ago

An artificial crown may be better, but not the roots. Natural teeth are fixed in the jaw in a very ingenious way that is durable and somewhat flexible at the same time. Not so with implants; the metal fuses with the bone in a hard way and transmits all the shocks fully into the jaw.

emmelaich 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Using gold as the core would help but of course would be somewhat expensive.

sssilver 13 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

What are the disadvantages of having all the shocks go fully into the jaw?

loloquwowndueo 10 hours ago | parent | next [-]

It’s like having a car with no shock absorbers.

kelnos 13 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Discomfort and pain, I would assume.

I wouldn't be surprised if this can, over time, also cause damage to your jaw, and put extra stress on your jaw muscles.

inglor_cz 13 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Depending on the location, state of the bone and other parameters, anything from mild discomfort to catastrophic failure of the implant and a jaw fracture.

I have four implants, two in my lower jaw, two in my upper jaw. My lower jaw is basically stone, an extremely hard bone even by usual lower jaw standards; the dentists (plural, as one was unable to finish the job) drilling into it destroyed a few drilling bits doing so. I have never had any problems with the lower jaw implants. That bone can take almost anything in stride.

My upper jaw, on the other hand ... very delicate, just enough bone left for the implants to work, and I learnt to be careful about biting into anything harder with them.