My 94-Year-Old Grandfather Had No Bone Left. I Still Gave Him Permanent Teeth
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
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ナレーター:
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著者:
📌 Learn more about Dr. Matt Annese or book a consultation: https://nashobadental.com
A dentist told you that you are not a candidate. That verdict was about their limitations, not your anatomy.
My grandfather was 94 years old with significant bone loss. He left my office with a full set of permanent, fixed, digitally designed teeth in a single day. Here is what that case taught me about who is actually a candidate for full arch dental implants, and why the bar most people believe exists is almost nothing like the real one.
In this episode, I am going to walk you through why the not-a-candidate conversation almost always goes wrong, what a real candidacy evaluation actually looks like, and what you can do tonight to find out where you actually stand.
⏱️ TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Why "not a candidate" is almost never about your anatomy
0:37 My grandfather's case: 94 years old, advanced bone loss, permanent teeth in a day
1:18 How bone loss became the default barrier to dental implants
2:14 What most evaluations are missing (no 3D scan, no surgical plan)
3:07 Why his result is not the exception; it is what this procedure looks like when done right
4:32 Why dentists turn patients away (it is their ceiling, not yours)
7:40 What a real candidacy evaluation actually covers
10:35 The one variable that predicts success more than anatomy
12:02 What to do tonight before making any decision about your teeth
❓ QUESTIONS ANSWERED
What does "not a candidate for dental implants" actually mean?
In most cases it reflects the clinical limits of the practitioner who said it, not a fixed truth about your bone or anatomy. Many patients turned away at one practice are successfully treated at another using 3D cone beam imaging and advanced placement techniques.
Can you get full arch dental implants with severe bone loss?
Yes, in most cases. Cone beam CT imaging maps the bone that actually exists, not just what is missing. Angled implant techniques and zygomatic implants allow placement where older straight-placement methods could not reach. The key is finding a practitioner whose volume in full arch cases is in the thousands, not dozens.
What should I ask at my dental implant consultation?
Ask the practitioner how many full arch cases they have personally completed, whether they use 3D cone beam imaging, and whether surgery and teeth fabrication happen in the same location. Those three answers tell you more about your actual candidacy than any x-ray will.
📱 RESOURCES
🌐 Nashoba Valley Dental: https://nashobadental.com
🌐 North Billerica Smiles: https://northbillericasmiles.com
📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr.mattannese/
🔔 New episodes on full arch dental implants, smile makeovers, and what the dental industry rarely tells patients drop regularly. Subscribe so you do not miss what is coming next.
ABOUT DR. MATT ANNESE, DMD
Dr. Matt Annese is a DMD, Fellow of the American Academy of Implant Dentistry (AAID), and Fellow of the International Congress of Oral Implantologists (ICOI). With 12 years of practice and over 2,000 full arch cases completed, he operates a fully digital, single-location implant and smile makeover practice in North Billerica, MA. Surgery, digital design, and same-day fabrication all happen under one roof. Dr. Annese oversees every phase of treatment from consultation through final delivery.
#DentalImplants #FullArchImplants #TeethInADay #BoneLoss #SmileMakeover