“What is the easiest tooth to extract?”
I am a 27 year old female. I want to know what is the easiest tooth to extract?
8 Answers
That completely depends on the situation, the patient, the location, the periodontal health and history of the tooth as well as the skill-set and experience of your provider.
If tooth is aligned, not very brittle as root canal treated teeth are difficult sometimes, you have to section it. Nothing is difficult if teeth are angulated and impacted, YES, it would be surgical. If the tooth needs to be extracted, it needs to be extracted. Dentist would try to do a simple extraction or we do section the tooth and take the tooth out in 2 or 3 pieces. Simple or surgical extraction, it depends and varies from patient to patient. We will look clinically and radiographically and will see how it will go. Deciduous teeth are easy like baby teeth. And age matters in extraction, too. Shape of the roots and bone level. All factors count here, so no worries. If you need extraction, just go for it. No worries. We are here to help.
Good luck.
Good luck.
Hello,
A tooth that has mobility due to periodontal bone loss is usually the easiest to remove. Given that they are already loose, most of the work is already done.
A tooth that has mobility due to periodontal bone loss is usually the easiest to remove. Given that they are already loose, most of the work is already done.
Any answer would be speculation however this depends upon the route structure and the overall condition of the crown of the tooth. Front teeth may be more difficult than back teeth due to the fact that when extracting a front tooth we must also maintain all of the integrity of the Surrounding bony plates so that in the future we will be able to place an implant or a bridge and keep the patients aesthetics. Due to the fact that there are so many variables it is very difficult to answer that question defensively.