Service 1

Dental Crowns

What are Dental Crowns?

A dental crown is a cap-like structure placed over a tooth to restore its shape, size, strength, and appearance. It completely encases the visible portion of the tooth above the gum line and is used to protect or improve a tooth that has been weakened or damaged.

When Are Dental Crowns Needed?

Dental crowns are recommended in the following situations:

  1. To restore a damaged tooth due to decay, trauma, or fractures.
  2. To protect a weakened tooth from breaking (e.g., after a root canal).
  3. To improve appearance by covering discolored, misshapen, or uneven teeth.
  4. For dental implants to act as an artificial tooth.
  5. To support a dental bridge, which replaces missing teeth.
  6. To cover and strengthen worn-down teeth.
Types of Dental Crowns
  1. Metal Crowns: Made of gold, palladium, nickel, or chromium, offering great durability but noticeable appearance.
  2. Porcelain-Fused-to-Metal (PFM) Crowns: Combines strength and aesthetics, as it has a metal base with porcelain coating for a natural look.
  3. All-Ceramic or All-Porcelain Crowns: Ideal for front teeth, offering the most natural look but less durable compared to metal.
  4. Zirconia Crowns: Highly durable, natural-looking, and biocompatible.
  5. Resin Crowns: Less expensive but prone to wear and staining over time.
  6. Stainless Steel Crowns: Temporary crowns often used for children.
Comparison Between Crowns & Bridges
FeatureDental CrownsDental Bridges
PurposeRestores a single damaged tooth.Replaces one or more missing teeth.
CoverageCovers and strengthens a single tooth.Anchored to adjacent teeth to bridge gaps.
MaterialMetal, ceramic, PFM, zirconia, or resin.Typically uses the same materials as crowns.
DurabilityLong-lasting with proper care (5–15+ years).Similarly durable but depends on the anchor teeth.
ProcedureFocused on one tooth.Involves adjacent teeth and the missing space.
CostGenerally less expensive than bridges.Costs more due to its larger scope.