Alternatives to root canals

Dear Cathy,

Thanks for your inquiry about alternatives to root canals. I took the liberty to watch a Mercola video to learn where he was coming from.

Your tooth has a big filling. That means the tooth is weakened a bit because a traditional filling does nothing to reinforce the tooth. Teeth like that often get stress cracks over time because of fatigue. If the crack goes off at an angle, a part of the tooth might break away and is easily repaired. However, if the crack moves vertically up the tooth, it can move into the nerve area or even split the tooth in half.

To strengthen a tooth with a crack, the tooth needs to be held together. The most common way to do that is with a crown. A crown is like a new strong outer shell for the tooth ; binding it together. Often an insulating build up is done to clean up , and strengthen the deeper areas where the old filling and or decay was.

When the nerve of a tooth becomes involved, either from a fracture, decay bacteria, or inflammation from trauma; the tooth can slowly or abruptly die. As Dr Mercola describes, a root canal seals the main micro tubes inside the tooth; usually three on a molar. However, like a river system, there are microscopic tributaries or side canals that the cleaning instruments don’t enter. However, as the tooth canals are cleaned out, the tooth is repeatedly irrigated with a disinfecting bleach solution. That important irrigation cleans the auxiliary canals.

About ten years ago the technology for doing root canals dramatically improved. Post operative discomfort and infections are rare. Millions of people enjoy keeping their teeth, thanks to root canals. Do some fail? Sure, but that is fairly rare these days– IF, the root canal is done well.

Back to the crack. The further a crack goes up a tooth, the poorer the outlook. When you bite, it stresses the tooth. The gross majority are saved without a problem, but depending on the situation, it’s possible to overload anything– even a tooth with no prior treatment.

Alternatives: Dr Mercola says extract all root canal teeth. Or maybe your fracture is far gone. Or the infection has gone on so long that a lot of bone has been destroyed around your tooth. OK, the tooth is lost.

The tooth can be left as a space, replaced with a removable appliance, replaced as a bridge, or done as an implant. For an implant to work, you need enough bone. In most cases these days, it is the preferred way too replace a tooth because it is strong, you can floss it normally and it does not force you to treat the adjacent teeth.

It is a complex subject. A good look at what is happening, and an understanding of your personal preferences should help you solve your problem. The tooth sounds like it is feeding an on going infection. Antibiotics help you short term, but are unable to treat the infection at its source inside the tooth (no longer a blood stream to deliver the drug and the pulp tissue inside and it won’t regenerate or heal).

If you are interested in seeing me for an exam, please set up an appointment. You will probably speak with Ann. 734-971-3450

I hope this was helpful to you — and I learned about Dr Mercola. I do disagree with him fundamentally though. I have seen way too many happy patients who have successful root canals, including myself.

Sincerely,
Kirk D.

Leave a Reply