I'm curious if you found anything out? The reason I ask is that while I'm still a little confused but I have a tooth that a crown broke off and on Monday the Dentist is going to remove the tooth that the crown came off because it's infected and then he's going to do graph it to the tooth next to it (and I thought he said bone graph it) to fill the space that was in place and infected but removed. But I could be wrong or confused.
Bone grafting for socket preservation is common and a good idea, especially if you plan later on to get an implant. Of course if the infection isn't real bad you could also do an immediate dental implant with some bone grafting at the same time. Costly though.
I have an appt this coming Tuesday for a cleaning and this time I’m gonna get straight to the point : if I don’t provide my own bone tissue and go with a donor, what about the possibility of transmission of mRNA if the donor was jabbed?
When I was in his office the other day, I mentioned my concern about using donor tissue several times. He told me about how it can even come from a pig and I said “look, I’m gonna get straight to the point. My immune system is so fantastic that I’m 53 and haven’t seen a doctor my entire life except for my 4 pregnancies. I refuse to jeopardize it.”
He still didn’t understand what I’m referring to. He just didn’t . So next visit I’m gonna ask him point blank. The only reason I chose to beat around the bush is bc even though he was an endontist and only deals with teeth, he was the absolute most genuine doctor I’ve ever been around. His manner was such that he came across as an old-timey doctor who happily made house calls.
Anyways, I’ll let you guys know what he says. Personally, I feel like I’m asking a moot question bc we all know it’s in the bones and everything else.
I'm curious if you found anything out? The reason I ask is that while I'm still a little confused but I have a tooth that a crown broke off and on Monday the Dentist is going to remove the tooth that the crown came off because it's infected and then he's going to do graph it to the tooth next to it (and I thought he said bone graph it) to fill the space that was in place and infected but removed. But I could be wrong or confused.
Bone grafting for socket preservation is common and a good idea, especially if you plan later on to get an implant. Of course if the infection isn't real bad you could also do an immediate dental implant with some bone grafting at the same time. Costly though.
I have an appt this coming Tuesday for a cleaning and this time I’m gonna get straight to the point : if I don’t provide my own bone tissue and go with a donor, what about the possibility of transmission of mRNA if the donor was jabbed?
When I was in his office the other day, I mentioned my concern about using donor tissue several times. He told me about how it can even come from a pig and I said “look, I’m gonna get straight to the point. My immune system is so fantastic that I’m 53 and haven’t seen a doctor my entire life except for my 4 pregnancies. I refuse to jeopardize it.”
He still didn’t understand what I’m referring to. He just didn’t . So next visit I’m gonna ask him point blank. The only reason I chose to beat around the bush is bc even though he was an endontist and only deals with teeth, he was the absolute most genuine doctor I’ve ever been around. His manner was such that he came across as an old-timey doctor who happily made house calls.
Anyways, I’ll let you guys know what he says. Personally, I feel like I’m asking a moot question bc we all know it’s in the bones and everything else.