Here is a comprehensive list of common dental terminology and terms you may hear or read as you learn more about oral health.
Tooth wear caused by forces other than chewing such as holding objects between the teeth or improper brushing.
A tooth (or implant) that supports a dental prosthesis.
General Anesthesia: A controlled state of unconsciousness, accompanied by a partial or complete loss of protective reflexes, including loss of ability to independently maintain airway and respond purposefully to physical stimulation or verbal command, produced by a pharmacologic or non-pharmacologic method or combination thereof.
Intravenous Sedation/Analgesia: A medically controlled state of depressed consciousness while maintaining the patient's airway, protective reflexes and the ability to respond to stimulation or verbal commands. It includes intravenous administration of a sedative and/or analgesic agent(s) and appropriate monitoring.
Local Anesthesia: The loss of pain sensation over a specific area of the anatomy without loss of consciousness.
Non-Intravenous Conscious Sedation: A medically controlled state of depressed consciousness while maintaining the patient's airway, protective reflexes and the ability to respond to stimulation or verbal commands. It includes administration of sedative and/or analgesic agent(s) by a route other than IV (PO, PR, Intranasal, IM), and appropriate monitoring.
Regional Anesthesia: A term used for local anesthesia.
Removal of the tip of a tooth root.
Term used to refer to an upper or lower denture.
Basic or routine cleaning for a normal amount of plaque build-up. Preventive treatment for patients with healthy gum tissue, not intended for patients with past history of or current gum disease. Price does not include a periodic examination, X-rays or fluoride treatment.
A premolar tooth; a tooth with two cusps.
Occurring on, or pertaining to, both right and left sides.
Process of removing tissue for histologic evaluation.
A cosmetic dental procedure that whitens the teeth using a bleaching solution.
A composite resin applied to a tooth to change its shape and/or color. Bonding also refers to how a filling, orthodontic appliance or some fixed partial dentures are attached to teeth.
Hard deposit of mineralized material adhering to crowns and/or roots of teeth.
Commonly used term for tooth decay.
Decay in tooth caused by caries; also referred to as carious lesion.
Hard connective tissue covering the tooth root.
A dental restorative material made up of disparate or separate parts (e.g., resin and quartz particles).
Crown - Simple crown procedure utilizing a porcelain crown fused to non-precious metal and not involving complicated prep.
Anatomical Crown - That portion of tooth normally covered by, and including, enamel.
Abutment Crown - Artificial crown serving for the retention or support of a dental prosthesis.
Artificial Crown - Restoration covering or replacing the major part, or the whole, of the clinical crown of a tooth.
The pointed portion of the tooth.
The lay term for carious lesions in a tooth; decomposition of tooth structure.
Scaling and polishing procedure performed to remove coronal plaque, calculus, and stains.
An artificial device that replaces one or more missing teeth.
A dentist who has received postgraduate training in one of the recognized dental specialties.
Doctor of Dental Surgery
Doctor of Dental Medicine
The part of the tooth that is beneath the enamel and cementum.
An artificial substitute for natural teeth and adjacent tissues.
The part of the denture that holds the artificial teeth and fits over the gums.
A restoration fabricated inside the mouth.
The condition of not having enough saliva to keep the mouth wet. If it goes untreated, severe dry mouth can lead to increased levels of tooth decay and infections of the mouth.
Hard calcified tissue covering dentin of the crown of tooth.
A dental specialist who limits his/her practice to treating disease and injuries of the pulp and associated periradicular conditions.
Wearing down of tooth structure, caused by chemicals (acids).
Surgical removal of bone or tissue.
Extraction - The process or act of removing a tooth or tooth parts.
Simple Extraction - Simple tooth extraction not requiring sectioning of the tooth or other extraordinary procedures for removal.
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Filling
Filling - A lay term used for the restoring of lost tooth structure by using materials such as metal, alloy, plastic or porcelain.
Amalgam - Single surface silver filling.
Composite - Single surface composite filling (white or tooth colored) performed on a tooth in the front of the mouth.
Orthodontic devices, commonly known as braces, that are bonded to the teeth to produce different tooth movements to help reposition teeth for orthodontic therapy.
The breaking of a part, especially of a bony structure; breaking of a tooth.
A combination of 14 or more periapical and 4 bitewing films of the back teeth. This series of x-rays reveals all the teeth (their crowns and roots) and the alveolar bone around them.
Soft tissues overlying the crowns of unerupted teeth and encircling the necks of those that have erupted.
Inflammation of gingival tissue without loss of connective tissue.
A piece of tissue or alloplastic material placed in contact with tissue to repair a defect or supplement a deficiency.
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Prosthesis constructed for placement immediately after removal of remaining natural teeth.
An unerupted or partially erupted tooth that is positioned against another tooth, bone, or soft tissue, so that complete eruption is unlikely.
Implant - Material inserted or grafted into tissue.
Dental Implant - A device specially designed to be placed surgically within or on the mandibular or maxillary bone as a means of providing for dental replacement; endosteal (endosseous); eposteal subperiosteal); transosteal (transosseous).
Between the teeth.
Inside the mouth.
A common name for either the maxilla or the mandible.
Pertaining to or around the lip.
An injury or wound; area of diseased tissue.
Pertaining tongue; surface of the tooth directed toward the tongue; opposite of facial.
Having the properties of dysplasia, invasion, and metastasis.
Improper alignment of biting or chewing surfaces of upper and lower teeth.
The upper jaw.
Teeth posterior to the premolars (bicuspids) on either side of the jaw; grinding teeth, having large crowns and broad chewing surfaces.
Pertaining to the biting surfaces of the premolar and molar teeth or contacting surfaces of opposing teeth or opposing occlusion rims.
Pertaining to the mouth.
A dental specialist whose practice is limited to the diagnosis, surgical and adjunctive treatment of diseases, injuries, deformities, defects and esthetic aspects of the oral and maxillofacial regions.
A dental specialist whose practice is limited to the interception and treatment of malocclusion of the teeth and their surrounding structures.
A removable prosthetic device that overlies and may be supported by retained tooth roots or implants.
The hard and soft tissues forming the roof of the mouth that separates the oral and nasal cavities.
Usually refers to a prosthetic device that replaces missing teeth.
Pertaining to the supporting and surrounding tissues of the teeth.
An infection in the gum pocket that can destroy hard and soft tissues.
Inflammatory process of the gingival tissues and/or periodontal membrane of the teeth, resulting in an abnormally deep gingival sulcus, possibly producing periodontal pockets and loss of supporting alveolar bone.
Inflammation and loss of the connective tissue of the supporting or surrounding structure of teeth with loss of attachment.
A soft sticky substance that accumulates on teeth composed largely of bacteria and bacterial derivatives.
Scaling and polishing procedure performed to remove coronal plaque, calculus and stains.
Connective tissue containing blood vessels and nerve tissue which occupies the pulp cavity of a tooth.
An image produced by projecting radiation, as X-rays, on photographic film. Commonly called an X-ray.
To resurface the side of the denture that is in contact with the soft tissues of the mouth to make it fit more securely.
A prosthetic replacement of one or more missing teeth that can be removed by the patient.
The anatomic portion of the tooth that is covered by cementum and is located in the alveolus (socket) where it is attached by the periodontal apparatus; radicular portion of tooth.
The portion of the pulp cavity inside the root of a tooth; the chamber within the root of the tooth that contains the pulp.
Removal of plaque, calculus, and stain from teeth.
Plastic resin placed on the biting surfaces of molars to prevent bacteria from attacking the enamel and causing caries.
Walnut-sized major salivary glands located beneath the tongue.
Stitch used to repair incision or wound.
An interim prosthesis designed for use over a limited period of time.
The connecting hinge mechanism between the base of the skull (temporal bone) and the lower jaw (mandible).
Tooth/teeth that have not penetrated into the oral cavity.
In the construction of crowns or pontics, a layer of tooth-colored material usually, but not limited to, composite, porcelain, ceramic or acrylic resin, attached to the surface by direct fusion, cementation, or mechanical retention; also refers to a restoration that is luted to the facial surface of a tooth.