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Cardwell Family Dentistry, Formerly Hillar Kollist Dental
45 King Street
Sylva, NC 28779
Crapanzano Leroy S DDS
538 Scotts Creek Road
Sylva, NC 28779
David M. LeMay, DDS
1259 Asheville Highway
Sylva, NC 28779
David S. McGuire DDS
45 King Street
Sylva, NC 28779
Dr. Elizabeth M. Ferguson, DDS
538 Scotts Creek Road
Sylva, NC 28779
Dr. Robert J. Davis, DDS
538 Scotts Creek Road
Sylva, NC 28779
Holbert C Lang II PA
1623 East Main Street
Sylva, NC 28779
Irvine N Ross DDS
1601 East Main Street
Sylva, NC 28779
John V. Edwards, DDS PA
1609 East Main Street
Sylva, NC 28779
Larcher Donald C DDS
37 Medical Park Loop
Sylva, NC 28779
Braces can make your life difficult in many various ways. Before the treatment, the patients usually have concerns about their future life with a foreign object in their mouth. The braces, however, do not prevent you from having a normal life. Nonetheless, during the treatment, you should follow all medical advices of your doctor, especially those concerning oral hygiene. ... .
Removable braces are usually used to treat not serious malocclusions in children who still have milk teeth. They also prevent the patients from worsening of the developing or already existing malocclusions. The greatest advantage of the removable braces is their low price. In comparison to fixed braces, the price of removable braces is really insignificant. ... .
Who wouldn't like to have white teeth? In reality, just a few people have an ideally white smile, though, everybody dreams about it. On the market we can now get chewing gums which - according to the producers - possess whitening qualities. Do tooth whitening chewing gums work at whitening teeth? ... .
A dead tooth is a colloquial name for a tooth that does not have a nerve inside it because it was replaced by a dissolvable material during the root canal treatment. A tooth may also become dead due to caries. The shade of dead teeth usually become grey. Fortunately, they can be whitened as well. ... .
Malocclusion means all dysfunctions of the tooth form and the incorrect relation between the teeth. There are genetic factors which condition the occurrence of malocclusion, nonetheless, it is most often an effect of bad habits in childhood. ... .