Tooth-preserving dentistry
Fillings, root-canal treatments, and careful diagnostics with the aim of preserving natural teeth for as long as possible.
This sample page is for demonstration purposes. The content is not dental advice and does not replace a personal patient consultation.
What does this mean?
Tooth-preserving dentistry starts with careful diagnosis. We check visible defects, older fillings, sensitivity, X-ray findings, and symptoms. Not every discolored or suspicious area has to be treated immediately; sometimes observation is the better decision.
If treatment is needed, we discuss the suitable options with you. These may include composite fillings, replacing leaking fillings, or, for larger defects, deciding whether a more stable restoration would make more sense. Possible additional costs are explained before treatment.
If the dental nerve is inflamed or no longer vital, root-canal treatment may help preserve the tooth. This is not a promise, but a realistic assessment: the initial finding, the shape of the root canals, existing restorations, and later stabilization all influence the prognosis.
Tooth-preserving dentistry is suitable for caries, broken fillings, deeper tooth damage, symptoms around older restorations, or a second opinion. The goal is a clear decision that is medically reasonable and understandable to you.