A missing tooth changes more than your smile—it affects how you chew, how you speak, and how your other teeth line up over time. The good news? Dental Bridges offer a time-tested, natural-looking way to replace one or several missing teeth so you can bite comfortably and smile without thinking twice.
What Is a Dental Bridge?
A Dental Bridge is a fixed replacement that fills the space where a tooth is missing. The replacement tooth (called a pontic) connects to the teeth or implants next door (called abutments). Once bonded in place, a bridge stays put—you don’t remove it for cleaning—and it looks and functions much like your natural teeth.
The Main Types of Dental Bridges
- Traditional bridge. A pontic sits between two crowns that fit over the teeth on either side of the gap. This is the most common type and works well when both neighboring teeth are strong.
- Cantilever bridge. Used when there’s a healthy anchor tooth on only one side of the space. It’s helpful in select cases but places more leverage on the abutment, so planning matters.
- Maryland (resin-bonded) bridge. A conservative option for certain front teeth; the pontic has “wings” that bond to the backs of neighboring teeth, reducing the need to reshape them. It’s a good minimal-prep choice but can have a higher risk of debonding over time.
- Implant-supported bridge. When several teeth are missing in a row, two or more dental implants can support a bridge without involving natural teeth. Success depends on healthy bone and good hygiene.
We’ll help you choose based on the position of the gap, your bite, esthetic goals, and the condition of the anchor teeth or bone.
Why Replace a Missing Tooth at All?
Teeth are team players. When one is lost, neighbors can drift or tip into the space, the opposing tooth can over-erupt, and chewing can get awkward. Replacing the space with Dental Bridges keeps your bite stable, makes eating easier, and supports your facial appearance.
The Bridge Process: What to Expect
- Planning and prep. We evaluate the gap and abutment teeth (or implants), check your bite, and talk materials and shade.
- Tooth preparation. For traditional bridges, we reshape the abutment teeth and take precise impressions or scans. Maryland bridges usually need little to no reshaping on the front surfaces.
- Temporary bridge. You’ll leave with a temporary to protect the area and maintain your smile.
- Delivery. At the next visit, we test the fit and bite, make small adjustments, and bond or cement your Dental Bridge in place.
Materials and Esthetics
Bridges can be made with porcelain fused to metal, all-ceramic systems (including zirconia), or metal alloys. Front-tooth bridges often use layered porcelain for lifelike translucency; back-tooth bridges may favor zirconia or porcelain-fused-to-metal for extra strength. As always, we’ll match the shade to neighboring teeth for a seamless result.
Everyday Care for Bridges
- Brush twice daily and floss under the pontic using floss threaders or a water flosser.
- Keep up with professional cleanings to keep the abutments healthy.
- Avoid chewing very hard items (ice, unpopped kernels) that can chip porcelain.
- If a bridge ever feels loose or your bite changes, call us—early tweaks prevent bigger fixes.
Benefits You’ll Notice
- Fixed comfort. Dental Bridges stay put—no clasps, no removal at night.
- Natural look. Modern ceramics and careful shade-matching make the replacement blend in.
- Chewing confidence. A well-designed bridge restores function so eating feels easy again.
- Stability. Replacing a gap helps prevent neighboring teeth from drifting and keeps your bite in balance.
How Long Do Dental Bridges Last?
Like crowns, bridges can last many years with good home care and regular cleanings. Success depends on the health of the abutment teeth or implants and how well the bridge is cleaned underneath. Resin-bonded (Maryland) bridges are conservative but can have higher debonding rates compared with traditional options, especially in areas with heavy bite forces.
Bridges vs. Implants: Which Fits Your Situation?
- Bridge advantages: Faster timeline, no surgery, excellent esthetics, predictable for single-tooth spaces when the neighbors already need crowns.
- Implant advantages: Doesn’t involve reshaping healthy adjacent teeth, and flossing feels just like a natural tooth. Implants can also support longer spans without overloading natural teeth.
- Sometimes we combine approaches: Two implants can support an implant-supported Dental Bridge to replace several teeth in a row.
Benefits Backed by Professional Sources
- ADA patient guidance explains that bridges replace one or more missing teeth and that success depends on the health of the supporting teeth or implants—so keeping the foundation healthy is key.
- Educational resources describe types like traditional, cantilever, and Maryland bridges and when they’re considered.
- Maryland (resin-bonded) bridges are conservative for front teeth but may have higher failure (debonding) rates than full-coverage options in some cases.
Are You a Candidate? The Planning Checklist
Before recommending Dental Bridges, we look at a few essentials: the health of the anchor teeth (or the amount of bone for implants), your bite forces, spacing, and gum health. If abutment teeth have large fillings or cracks, they’re often great candidates for full-coverage crowns to support a traditional bridge. If those teeth are pristine and the gap is in the front, a Maryland design may conserve enamel. We’ll also take X-rays and photos so you can see what we see and why a specific plan makes sense.
Common Questions (and Straight Answers)
Will food get trapped under my bridge?
Food can collect around any tooth, but good design plus floss threaders or a water flosser keep things clean. We’ll show you how to loop floss under the pontic in ten seconds flat.
What if a bridge chips?
Small porcelain chips can often be polished or repaired. If damage is significant, the bridge may need to be remade—another reason to skip hard candies and ice.
How many teeth can a bridge replace?
Short spans are most predictable. For longer spans, we often consider an implant-supported Dental Bridge so forces are spread to implants instead of natural teeth.
Cost, Insurance, and Timeline
Most dental plans cover Dental Bridges for missing teeth. Costs vary with materials, the number of units, and whether implants are involved. Traditional bridges usually take two visits a few weeks apart; Maryland bridges can sometimes be completed sooner; implant-supported bridges add surgical healing time before the final restoration. We’ll map out the options and provide a written estimate so you can plan without guesswork.
A Few Pro Tips for Long-Term Success
- Use super-floss or a threader nightly; it’s quick once you get the hang of it.
- Schedule professional cleanings every six months (or more often if recommended) to keep abutments and gums healthy.
- Wear a nightguard if you clench—protects porcelain and your jaw joints.
- Call if anything feels loose or “different”; tiny adjustments today prevent big problems tomorrow.
Dental Bridges are about more than closing a space—they keep your smile functional, your chewing comfortable, and your confidence high.
Ready to replace a gap and get back to comfortable chewing? Contact Belton Healthy Smiles at (816) 331-5900 or visit us at 8435 Clint Dr, Belton, MO 64012 to schedule a consultation.