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Our Approach

Why we preserve teeth first.

When a tooth can be kept predictably, preservation can protect more than the tooth itself.

Natural teeth provide support, sensation, bite feedback, and a history of functioning in your mouth. When preservation is clinically reasonable, KYT explains those options before discussing removal or replacement.

Why it matters

What natural teeth provide.

Natural support

Natural teeth provide structural support for surrounding bone and neighboring teeth. That relationship is difficult to fully replicate with a restoration.

Bite feedback

Natural teeth transmit force feedback during chewing. This helps the jaw self-regulate bite pressure in ways that restorations may not fully reproduce.

Bone and gum relationship

Tooth roots stimulate the surrounding bone. When a tooth is removed, bone resorption in that area can begin within months.

Future options

Keeping a tooth, even with a restoration, often preserves more future treatment options compared to removal at the same point in time.

Maintenance over time

All restorations, including implants, require maintenance and eventual replacement. Preserving a natural tooth delays that cycle when clinically reasonable.

When preservation may not be the right path

When removal may be the clearer option.

Removing a tooth changes how support, force, and future options are managed. KYT explains that tradeoff before recommending removal. Some clinical situations do make preservation less predictable.

Root fracture that cannot be predictably restored

Insufficient bone or gum support remaining

Too little healthy tooth structure to restore reliably

Persistent infection that has not responded to treatment

Clinical findings that make long-term function unlikely

Restorations and replacements need maintenance over time. When a tooth can be kept safely, preserving it may help protect more future options.

KYT Framework

How KYT decides.

Four variables shape how we evaluate whether a tooth can be kept, what it would take to keep it, and what the options look like if it cannot be.

Structure

Is enough healthy tooth support still present to restore the tooth predictably?

Force

Can the tooth handle normal chewing forces with a restoration in place?

Timing

Is this something that can be protected now, or have conditions changed the available options?

Long-term stability

Which path is most likely to stay comfortable and maintainable over time?

Trying to decide whether a tooth can be saved?

KYT can evaluate tooth structure, support, bite forces, and timing so you understand the options before choosing care.