Implant / Tooth Replacement: FINAL STEP!

My new replacement tooth is finally, finally, finally in place. The implant is healed; the crown is on; it is over.

The procedure to install the crown was a little icky and unpleasant, but endurable. I would have enjoyed a tranquilizer or vodka tonic first, but it was okay without. First the dentist unscrewed the little screw in the center of the implant (the implant, if you remember, is the part under the gums); that little screw was only there while the implant was healing, and could now be removed. In its place the dentist screwed in the abutment, which if I’m following this correctly is the piece that sticks out from the gums and is for the crown (the part that looks like a tooth) to attach to. In between removing the screw and putting in the abutment, they disinfected the center of the implant, and there was the unpleasant taste of whatever they used for that. After the abutment was in, they took an x-ray to make sure it was in there correctly.

The abutment has to be locked permanently into place, and this was one of my least favorite parts: the dentist has to screw it in until it snaps twice, which means it’s locked. So there was a lot of weird intense pressure (no pain, but it wasn’t comfortable) that felt really clearly like it was Inside the Bones of My Face (it didn’t hurt in a GUMS way at all), and then I had to anticipate a SNAP, which was indeed startling when it arrived but I’m sure glad the dentist mentioned it ahead of time or I would have thought something had broken. Then we repeated the pressure/anticipation/snap. He gave me a mirror and I could see a teensy metal paddle-thing sticking out where my fake tooth was going to be. I looked very odd, like a James Bond villain.

The dentist and assistant spent some time making sure the crown would fit, was the right color, etc. Ahead of time the assistant told me that it does occasionally happen that a crown arrives and it won’t fit or it’s the wrong color, so I was not getting my hopes entirely up that things would go well, but they did: everything fit right and looked nice. The dentist had to press HARD on the crown to make sure it fit right; this was gums-painful, exactly as you’d expect if someone pressed something hard against your gums. He also used one of those pointy little metal tools to trace all the way around the crown to make sure the gums weren’t getting pinched underneath, and this was painful enough that I think he should have warned about it, but maybe he didn’t know. It was like when they use the pointy thing that measures the depth of your gum pockets, except it was sliding along the gum instead of just poking down and back out.

Then there was some messing around with whatever adhesive they needed to use. Then the dentist put the crown in place for real, and there was a repeat of the pressing-hard-on-gums pain and also the tracing-around-with-pointy-thing pain, twice, plus sharp picking sensations as, I suspect, he was removing traces of extra adhesive. Really, it was quite uncomfortable, but I was bolstered by the knowledge that we were WRAPPING THIS UP and the whole lengthy process would soon be complete.

He gave me a mirror, and I had a TOOTH. The gums around the tooth were startlingly white; he said that would fade very soon and it did. He said it might be slightly sore for a day or so and it was, but nothing that really bothered me or was a problem for eating—more like An Awareness of the area. I still have an Awareness feeling even a week later, but less.

Then the part I wasn’t expecting: the assistant had me bite down on that paper stuff that shows them how accurate your bite is, and then the dentist had to spend some time drilling to make my bite fit right again. He took some off my front BOTTOM teeth, which surprised me. He also took some off the new crown. It didn’t hurt, but if you hate even non-painful drilling then you know what it was like, and it was a particularly screamy drill, and then I had to keep re-biting the paper, and my mouth was trembling enough to make this difficult, and I was not having a good time.

But then it was done! It was done and I walked out without having to make any more appointments!

The tooth felt very weird in my mouth for awhile, and still feels a little weird nearly a week later. My tongue keeps exploring it as a foreign object, but each day it feels a little less foreign. I am not used to biting with it, since I’ve been biting without it for nine months; when I do bite with it, it feels weird, like there is something in between my tooth and what I’m biting—but it is feeling less weird each day. It feels odd to brush it, and a little unpleasant—again, like I’m brushing something in between my tooth and the toothbrush. I hate flossing it: the floss has to go much further up under the gumline than usual. But I will get used to that.

I had a little lisp/whistle the first few days, but Paul said no one could hear it but me. I’d gotten used to talking without the tooth or with a flipper (the temporary/removable fake tooth) that has a section covering part of the roof of my mouth, so talking with regular teeth again was strange. When I go out somewhere, I keep thinking “Oh no! I forgot my tooth!”—and then realizing the “forgot my tooth” feeling (from having nothing against the roof of my mouth) is now invalid.

I am very happy it’s done, and I’m glad I had it done, but is there no way technology could advance in this area? That took a REALLY LONG TIME. I had the tooth pulled LAST SEPTEMBER. It is now JUNE. That’s a whole SCHOOL YEAR.

13 thoughts on “Implant / Tooth Replacement: FINAL STEP!

  1. Celeste

    Sheesh. You can make a full term baby in that amount of time. It just seems like a tooth should roll off the production line a lot faster.

    Reply
  2. StephLove

    I’m glad it’s finally done. Beth had an implant and I don’t remember it taking that long, but maybe when it’s someone else you fail to notice what a slow process it is.

    Reply
  3. Rae

    I cannot thank you enough for walking through this. I had to have TWO back molars on one side extracted in November and am just now reaching the “expose the implants and attach the screws” phase and it has been awful. My bite feels messed up from chewing on one side of my mouth for 7 months, it’s expensive, my dental anxiety is off the charts, it’s taking forever and I too do not understand how there is nothing else available that doesn’t take almost a year to complete! Well. Anyway, thank you so much for these posts it’s been very helpful and I am starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

    Reply
  4. Caitlin

    Ohhhh this is bringing back so many memories of The Jaw Surgery Times. The feeling stuff happening in your bones. The uncomfortable sensations. The actual pain. The trembling. The so so so many appointments biting down in weird blue paper to make sure my bite was okay. Lather, rinse, repeat ten hours and times. I am empathizing SO HARD rn.

    Reply
  5. Alex

    Yay! Congrats! I would like to see a picture of your full-term baby new tooth. If I could post pictures in the comments I would repay with a picture of my full-term new baby.

    Also this reminded me to go back and re-read your post about the tooth extraction and the temporary-temporary tooth and I laughed a lot, with the particular benefit of feeling that I’m not laughing at your pain because it is now all over.

    Reply
  6. LeighTX

    My dad started the process of getting a whole mouthful of implants last year and he’s STILL not finished. He’s there right now, actually, and his situation is complicated by the fact that they moved halfway across the country after starting the process but he wants to keep the same dentist, so every time they have to do a new procedure it’s a 2-day drive there and a 2-day drive back. I think I’d almost rather have dentures like my grandpa did, and keep them in a glass of water by the bed at night! :)

    Reply
  7. Gigi

    It’s DONE – YAY!

    Every time anything happens in my mouth – like when a piece of a crown just fell off (turns out this wasn’t a big deal and nothing needed to be done; nor was it painful) my tongue kept probing it.

    Reply
  8. Suzanne

    Oh HOORAY! I am so happy for you that it is DONE. And thank you for sharing every step of the process – I found it strangely fascinating.

    Reply
  9. Matti

    I’m so sorry that it was unpleasant and took such a long time. Hurray for it being over!!!! Thank you for documenting each step in such a matter of fact way and describing not just the events, but the feelings (both emotional and physical) around each one. This was extremely helpful and well done.

    Reply
  10. Chrissy

    We had a dentist appointment today and she recommended we start this process for my 17 1/2 year old. When she was 11 she had a cyst that was all tangled up in her cheek/jaw/molar/wisdom tooth on one side and had to have all of it surgically removed. They told us to wait until she was 18 and get an implant, and now low and behold, we are staring down implant costs and college costs at once! I will need to go back and review all of your tooth-related posts to make sure she is prepared. She is very squeamish, though. Does not sound like fun.

    I’m glad yours is over with! Happy chomping.

    Reply
  11. Alexicographer

    Oh yay! I am sorry that took so long and hope I never need to know as much detail about it as you provided, but am grateful you did because now I know where to find it. And glad the whole thing is complete, for your sake!

    Reply

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