Home Talk Free Talk 자연치료가 안되면 병원에 가야 하는 것 아니냐? 자연치료가 안되면 병원에 가야 하는 것 아니냐? Name * Password * Email 의사들이 괜찮단다..... 쿠오라도 찾을 줄 모르고, 영어도 못하는 까막눈 미친 색기들아.... If you have a molar pulled, will your other teeth shift and accommodate for the missing tooth? No, no medical reason at all to have the missing premolar replaced. I will respectfully disagree with my colleagues and suggest if you did nothing, there would be minimal or no negative dental sequellae if you did not replace it either. It will not predispose you to further tooth loss. There might be a bit of supererruption of the opposing tooth but that depend on your occlusion and it make be of no issue. It is not going to keep erupting downwards into the space until it is only held in the mouth by a couple of PDL fibres. Esthetics? Only if the gap bothers you. It is not a front tooth. As with any esthetic consideration it should be your perceptions rather than your dentist’s. Just because a dentist does not like the space created by a missing tooth is not necessarily a reason for you to not like it. Drifting of other teeth? Yes there may be some drifting to close the space. Will it become pathological? Generally not. You must have an implant? Olololo, no one must have an implant. The human jaw is set up for a certain number of teeth and if you lose one the consequences will be dire? Ololo. No. Research has suggested that a funtional dentition can be 20 to 22 teeth with 9 of them in pairs so they can contact and aid in proper chewing. So missing one tooth in your head does not contravene this nor put you on a path for dental disaster. Is it ideal to replace any missing tooth? Well, yes, that is the definition of ideal treatment but we also know that much of life is not ideal and it does not necessarily disadvantage or kill us especially one solitary missing tooth. Your facial profile will collapse? Seriously people, stop dabbling in witchcraft. No, one missing premolar will not significantly alter your face or jaw profile. Four years have gone by and you have not said that your life and oral health have collapsed. The best judge of whether you need any treatment is your dentist from whom you are receiving at least annual exams and can monitor any problems over time. But logic and research suggest you can live your life without that premolar and the sky will not fall, nor will your oral health collapse. I agree to the terms of service Comment