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Difficult Central Case

Thomas Monahan Mike Skramstad
7 years ago

I wanted to post a fairly difficult central incisor case that I just completed...

This patient came to me wanting to improve her smile.  She had some chipping and wear on tooth #8 and an old PFM on tooth #9 that had a previous RCT. 

The tissue was extremely inflammed on #9 and the margin was quite subgingival.  I determined that she had a biologic width invasion here that was likely going to need osseous crown lengthening....

So first, I planned the case out using simple photoshop smile design...

Here is where she needed her gingival crest to be on 8 and 9:

Here is where I planned where her teeth needed to be to have correct proportions.  Tooth #8 needed to be lengthened slightly and the incisal edge on #9 was correct based on her lip at rest photo:

Then I quickly morphed the teeth into the correct position using photoshop:

So... the plan was the following:

  1. Prep and provisionalize the teeth to the correct position using a diode laser to recontour the tissue based on the original plan
  2. Send her to the Periodontist to perform osseous crown lengthening (mostly on #9) to get the tissue to respond and eliminate the Biologic Width problem
  3. Allow the tissue to heal
  4. Fabricate the final restorations

After removing the crown on #9... I got another suprise... ouch:

I opaqued the tooth to try the best I could to block it out and finalized the preparations on both 8 and 9:

I made the provisionals on 8 and 9 and sent her to the periodontist:

Two months later after healing, we did the final restorations out of e.max MT shade M1:

There was still a little darkness coming from the root of #9, but overall I was very pleased (and the patient was thrilled).  If you look at the smile picture, it doesn't show :)

This was a long and difficult case to do... but I feel because it was planned properly and the patient understood what was needed, it turned out pretty good!

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