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All Ceramic Crown & Bridge
Dental Lab

Raytops All Ceramic Crowns & Bridges

All Ceramic Crowns & Bridges are a popular choice in modern dental restorations, offering a perfect blend of strength, durability, and natural aesthetics. Made from advanced materials like zirconia or alumina, these restorations mimic the look and feel of natural teeth while providing excellent performance. Zirconia, known for its high strength and resistance to wear, is commonly used for both single crowns and bridges. 

The process begins with taking accurate impressions or digital scans of the patient’s teeth, followed by design using CAD/CAM technology. The restoration is then milled, sintered, glazed, and polished to ensure durability and a natural, tooth-like appearance.

All-ceramic crowns and bridges are ideal for patients seeking metal-free, highly aesthetic, and long-lasting dental solutions. With ongoing advancements in technology, these restorations continue to deliver exceptional results in both function and appearance.

Featured Crowns & Bridge Dental

Monolithic Zirconia

Monolithic Zirconia is a high-performance, durable, and aesthetically pleasing dental restoration material made from 100% pure zirconia, suitable for crowns, bridges, and various other dental restorations. Its metal-free composition offers outstanding wear resistance and exceptional bite strength, making it particularly ideal for posterior restorations. With its natural translucency, Monolithic Zirconia achieves a balance of strength and aesthetics, making it an excellent choice for patients seeking a hypoallergenic, long-lasting solution. Thanks to its fast production process and biocompatibility, Monolithic Zirconia is a preferred option in dental clinics, meeting patient needs for comfort, durability, and efficient treatment.

High Translucent Zirconia

High Translucent Zirconia is a dental restoration material that combines both strength and aesthetics. With high translucency, it closely mimics the natural color and luster of teeth, while offering superior durability, making it suitable for crowns and bridges in both anterior and posterior areas. Ideal for patients with high aesthetic demands, High Translucent Zirconia provides excellent biocompatibility for comfortable wear. Due to its durability and hypoallergenic properties, High Translucent Zirconia has become a widely recommended option to meet diverse patient needs.

Zirconia Porcelain Crowns

Zirconia Porcelain Crowns combine a high-strength zirconia base with a porcelain layer for aesthetics, making them ideal for crown restorations in both anterior and posterior teeth. The strength of zirconia withstands significant bite forces, while the porcelain layer provides a natural color and translucency that closely resembles real teeth. With high biocompatibility, Zirconia Porcelain Crowns are suitable for patients with metal allergies and offer excellent durability, making them a highly recommended choice in dental clinics.

IPS E.max

Zirconia Porcelain Crowns combine a high-strength zirconia base with a porcelain layer for aesthetics, making them ideal for crown restorations in both anterior and posterior teeth. The strength of zirconia withstands significant bite forces, while the porcelain layer provides a natural color and translucency that closely resembles real teeth. With high biocompatibility, Zirconia Porcelain Crowns are suitable for patients with metal allergies and offer excellent durability, making them a highly recommended choice in dental clinics.

Table of Contents

Acrylic Dentures – Definitive Guide

1. Types of acrylic dentures

Acrylic dentures help patients restore functionality and aesthetics to their smile. There are several types of dentures below.

Complete dentures

For full jaw missing teeth, patients will need complete dentures (aslo known as full dentures). Acrylic full dentures are custom made for your mouth, when all your teeth are missing (or have been extracted) due to various reasons such as decay, injury, or periodontal disease. They cover the entire upper or lower jaw in an arch. They can be removable or attached to your jaws with dental implants.

Acrylic partial denture

Acrylic partial dentures are a great alternative, when a person has one or more missing teeth in the upper or lower arch, but there are still remaining teeth. Partial dentures have a distinct advantage. They can attach to the remaining teeth to increase retention.

Immediate dentures

When a tooth needs to be extracted, immediately wearing acrylic dentures right after teeth extraction can solve the problem. It is called immediate denture. Immediate dentures can be acrylic partial dentures or complete dentures. They allow you to go to clinical appointments and come out with new smile on the same day. You can start adjusting to your new smile right away.

Removable over-dentures

Removable over-dentures are also known as removable implant over-dentures (a type of full mouth denture implants). Normally, implants are inserted in the jawbone. After the gume tissue has healed, implants can connect to locators or implant bars that will firmly attach to full dentures. Patients can attach or disattach over-dentures by themselves anytime and enywhere. This ensures that retention is great while oral hygiene is protected, because the denture can be removed for daily cleaning.

Fixed dentures

Fixed dentures are a hybrid of acrylic dentures and implant bars (a type of full mouth denture implants). The implants will connect to a titanium bar. Then an acrylic complete denture is fused onto the bar. Finally, the titanium bar with the complete denture is screw retained into the implants. Fixed dentures look and function similar to a removable implant over-denture. However, they cannot be removed by patients for daily cleaning.

2. Advantages of Acrylic Dentures

Easy maintenance

Dentures wear and tear just like anything you use every day. If your dentures are cracked or chipped, it can be dangerous to continue wearing them, so you should seek repairs as soon as possible. Robust dental technicians can easily repair any cracks or breakages by flowing new acrylic into the cracks.

Easy to add more teeth

Due to the high plasticity of the acrylic material, new acrylic teeth can be added into the acrylic base. This makes acrylic dentures especially popular for those who need partial dentures but may lose more natural teeth in the future. That way, every time you lose a tooth, you don’t have to get a new denture.

Affordable option

Acrylic dentures cost a lot less than metal framework dentures and flexible dentures. This makes acrylic dentures a more affordable option, especially for denture wearers who are still losing natural teeth and may need to adjust their dentures in the future.

3. Disadvantages of Acrylic Dentures

  • They are thicker and wider than flexible dentures, which gives a less natural appearance and may cause speaking difficulties.
  • Acrylic material is not very durable. Normally, an acrylic denture should be replaced in every 2 years, even under the right care.
  • They change shape over time, so more adjustments are required over time.
  • Their biting force is limited, making it more difficult to tear and chew food.

4. How to Care for Acrylic Dentures

If you are new to dentures, it will take some time getting used to because dentures are not fixed. During the first few weeks, you may need to practice using, eating and speaking with your dentures.

If you have an acrylic full denture without any implant retention, the denture can move and slide when speaking and chewing. You may use dental adhesives and you will usually need to visit your dentist for a periodontal examination to adjust the entire denture, as the bone/gums of the denture can shrink and change over time.

Taking care of your new dentures is just as important as cleaning your natural teeth. Dentures can be easily cleaned with a regular toothbrush and toothpaste (there is also a special denture cleaner). By making sure you clean them regularly, you’ll help protect them from any build-up of plaque. Daily cleaning can also prevent bacteria from growing on their surfaces.

Be careful when cleaning as they are not very durable and could break if dropped from a height. An acrylic denture will need to be replaced once it is deformed, broken or uncomfortable. Therefore, we recommend that you wash them in a sink full of water.

Most of the time, you don’t sleep with your dentures on. This is because it is recommended not to cover the gums all the time. But it’s important that you put your dentures in a glass of water so they don’t dry out.

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