Yes, teeth that have root canals frequently turn dark over time.
that is a root canal of a molar tooth. Meaning the dentist is removing the nerve and pulp of the tooth.
Is replacing bonded tooth with a crown necessary to prevent root canal?
root canal
Yes, this is very normal I can't remember what my dentist called it but she says its when one tooth has something done to it, automatically all the teeth around feel the pressure and strain. I had 4 root canals last week and at first I thought they had done a root canal to the tooth behind it also because it hurt so bad and all the sudden felt loose. They told me nothing had been done to it and that was perfectly normal and after like 2 days it went away.
The only alternative to performing a root canal procedure is to extract the diseased tooth.
After a root canal has been performed, the tooth will often become brittle and weak. This may lead to the tooth fracturing under normal stress. Depending on how the tooth fractures, it may not be possible to restore the tooth with a crown at that point. The tooth then will probably require extraction. Consider a crown a kind of insurance policy on the root canal.
If your tooth needs a root canal and is not painful, then it must be a dead tooth. When a tooth is dead, it is a source of infection which is not good. It is possible that it could hurt in the future due to infection. Better to have the root canal done, because you're trying to save your tooth. If you don't have the root canal treatment done and your tooth continues to decay, the dentist might have to pull that tooth out in the future. Once you pull out your tooth, that's gone forever
A root canal implant is not a procedure but two separate treatments—root canal therapy preserves a natural tooth by removing infected pulp, and a dental implant replaces a missing or removed tooth with an artificial tooth embedded in the jawbone. When a tooth cannot be saved using a root canal, it might be removed and replaced by a dental implant for long-term aesthetics and function. For more details, visit FMS Dental Hyderabad
yes
No. By definition, a 'dry socket' is a painful condition that occurs following a tooth extraction, not a root canal. That is not to say that you cannot have pain following a root canal. You can, particularly if the tooth was acutely infected at the time of the root canal, or if the root canal is incomplete. You should consult with the dentist who performed the procedure and follow his/her recommendations.
what could have happened is that the root canal was not done properly, or the tooth was so damaged that the root canal did not work. In this event, the tooth may have to be pulled (its what happened to me about a week ago)
yes