Preserving the natural tooth is the best implant!

Over 25 years ago dentistry focused on overly simplistic idea:

If a tooth is compromised… remove it and place an implant.

This Sounds clean. This Sounds modern.

But it’s not always the answer.

Now We’ve come full circle.

The truth? Nothing beats a natural tooth.

A natural tooth isn’t just a structure sitting in bone.

It’s connected by the periodontal ligament — a living, adaptive system that:

• Maintains bone

• Absorbs forces

• Allows movement and feedback

Take the tooth out… and that tooth- ligament and bone connection – formed whilst we were embryos is gone forever!

An implant?

It’s just a q screw in bone.

No ligament. No adaptation. No biological intelligence.

Bone loss is not a complication of implants— it’s expected most of the time 

Here’s the part patients are rarely told:

With implants, bone loss is built into the definition of success (Albrekstson).

• Up to 2 mm lost in year one

• Then 0.2 mm every year after

After 10 years?

Nearly 4 mm of bone gone… and it’s still called a “success.”

Now compare that to root canal treatment:

Success =

-No pain

-Complete healing of apical disease 

-Disease eliminated

If it doesn’t heal  after 5 years imost studies on outcome consider this not healed 

The bar is completely different.

And then there’s medications…

Modern patients aren’t the same as they were 20 years ago.

More people are taking:

• Bisphosphonates

• Denosumab

• Steroids

• Cancer therapies

• many antidepressants (SSRIs)

These can:

• Impair healing

• Reduce bone quality

• Increase implant failure risk

And here’s the key point:

Patients usually start these medications later in life — after the implant is placed.

So the risk goes up over time, not down.

Implants are good! But Natural teeth are better.

Yes — implants have a role.

Yes — they can work very well.

But they are replacement parts, not equivalents.

A root canal–treated tooth:

• Preserves bone via the ligament 

• is connected to the body and Allows for growth changes over time 

• Maintains natural function

• Avoids surgery

And long-term?

They perform extremely well.

The real philosophy shift

The question shouldn’t be:

“Can we replace this tooth?”

It should be:

“Can we save it?”

Because once it’s gone…

you can never truly get it back.

Bottom line

👉 If a tooth can be saved — save it.

👉 Root canal treatment should be the first choice, not the last resort.

👉 Implants are for when a tooth is truly non-restorable.

That’s not old-school dentistry.

That’s biologically sound, long-term thinking

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