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Dental Crowns & Bridges

Protect your teeth and restore your natural smile

Finch Midland Dental in Scarborough offers custom dental crowns and bridges to restore broken, weakened, or missing teeth — using shade-matched porcelain and zirconia materials for results that blend seamlessly with your natural smile. our team uses digital impressions and precise prep techniques to ensure each restoration fits comfortably, protects the underlying tooth, and lasts for years. Patients from Scarborough choose Finch Midland Dental for reliable restorative work that looks natural and feels like home. Schedule a consultation or call (416) 297-6109.

Why Do You Need a Dental Crown?

In the past, you may have had fillings to repair your teeth therefore you may wonder why you require an onlay or crown this time? Both of these options are an ideal way to restore teeth that have large, old restorations that can’t be repaired. Dental crowns also help to strengthen teeth after root canal therapy. These restorations are also recommended to restore a tooth that has been fractured or extensively damaged by decay in a way that a filling can’t fix.

Crowns are designed to adhere to your remaining tooth structure and cover your tooth like a cap. This allows it to encase the entire tooth, so you can eat, chew, brush, and floss with ease again.

Why Do You Need a Dental Bridge?

Why Do You Need a Dental Bridge?

Missing teeth look unattractive, undermine your self-confidence, and make speaking and chewing uncomfortable. A bridge is a solution for replacing one or multiple missing teeth that are adjacent. It relies on adjacent teeth as anchors for one or more prosthetic teeth in the middle. These teeth support the bridge which will restore the lost function and aesthetics.

There are benefits when choosing a dental bridge such as:
• A bridge is a fixed, long-term solution that can be a better choice for some patients than an appliance that is removable.
• A bridge prevents teeth from drifting into the empty space
• A bridge is a great alternative when we can’t utilize a dental implant.

What Types of Dental Bridges Are Available?

What Types of Dental Bridges Are Available?

Dental crowns generally have a uniform structure, but the various types of dental bridges exhibit distinct variations in their structure. At present, four different types of dental bridges are available: traditional, cantilever, Maryland, and implant-supported. The traditional dental bridge is composed of two dental crowns utilized as anchors with a fake tooth or teeth placed in the middle, making it one of the most widely used types of dental bridges. Similarly, a cantilever bridge utilizes an anchor crown only on one adjacent tooth to the missing tooth. Due to the potential excessive strain on the anchor tooth, cantilever bridges are usually not recommended, although they may be necessary towards the back of the mouth. A Maryland dental bridge, like a traditional dental bridge, employs the same structure, but instead of dental crowns, it employs a metal framework attached to the backs of the two teeth on either side of the gap. Finally, an implant-supported dental bridge is identical in structure to a traditional bridge, but with dental implants serving as the anchor teeth.

What Types of Dental Crowns Are Available?

Although the structure of dental crowns remains consistent, the materials used to make them can vary significantly. Dental crowns are typically made from stainless steel, metal, porcelain fused to metal, all-resin, or all-ceramic/all-porcelain materials. Stainless steel crowns are commonly used in children on baby teeth or as temporary crowns, while metal crowns made from gold, platinum, or base metal alloys are a more common choice for permanent crowns. Porcelain fused to metal (PFM) crowns feature a metal base with a ceramic exterior, which provides both strength and a natural appearance. All-resin crowns are made from dental composite resin and can be color-matched to your teeth, while all-ceramic/all-porcelain crowns offer a stronger alternative to all-resin and can also be matched to the natural color of your teeth.

Transcript
a dental crown is a tooth shaped cap or cover placed over a remaining natural tooth structure dental crowns restored to this original shape size strength and overall appearance a crown is used to protect and restore a weak or broken tooth oftentimes from decay other common reasons for the placement of dental crowns include holding dental bridges in place covering dental implants following root canal therapy and cosmetic modifications such as covering misshapen or discolored teeth to improve their appearance dental crowns are made from a variety of different materials including porcelain resin ceramic and stainless steel the placement of a dental crown requires two visits to the dentist during the first visit anesthesia is applied to both the tooth and the surrounding gum tissue once the area is numb the surface areas of the tooth are shaped to ensure sufficient space for the crown after reshaping the natural tooth the dentist will use a paste or putty like material to take impressions of the remaining two these impressions are taken to aid in the construction of the dental crown by a certified dental laboratory to create a customized permanent crown this process will take about three weeks meanwhile a secure temporary crown is placed over the tooth for protection temporary crowns are typically made of acrylic and they are held in place by a temporary cement during the second visit to the dentist the tooth and gum tissue are frequently numbed the temporary crown is removed and the customized permanent dental crown is checked for fit [Music] it is then cemented into place with a special adhesive for more information on dental crowns please do not hesitate to contact our friendly team today

How Is a Dental Crown or Bridge Placed

Placing a dental crown or bridge requires two appointments. During the initial appointment, dental impressions will be taken, and your tooth or teeth will be prepared. Dental impressions are critical in creating a mold of your mouth that will be sent to a dental laboratory. The dental laboratory will use this information to create a custom-made dental crown or bridge. Your tooth or teeth will also need to be prepared for the placement of a crown or bridge. To accomplish this, your mouth will first be numbed to ensure your comfort. The decayed tissue is then removed, and the remaining tissue is reshaped. This process will need to be repeated for each tooth that is receiving a dental crown. Once the tooth is shaped, a temporary crown or bridge will be installed to protect the teeth while the permanent restoration is being fabricated.

Upon completion of the permanent restoration, you will return to our office for a second appointment. During this second visit, the temporary crown or bridge will be removed, and your teeth will be cleaned before placing the permanent restoration.

Key Benefits

Why Choose This Treatment

Restores Full Function

Crowns and bridges allow you to chew, speak, and bite with the same force and comfort as your natural teeth — no dietary restrictions required.

Natural Appearance

Porcelain and zirconia materials are color-matched to your surrounding teeth so precisely that your crown or bridge is virtually indistinguishable from natural enamel.

Protects Damaged Teeth

A crown seals and reinforces a cracked or weakened tooth, preventing further fracture and shielding it from bacteria that could cause decay or infection.

Long-Lasting Durability

With proper care, well-placed crowns and bridges routinely last 10–15 years or longer — making them one of dentistry's most cost-effective long-term investments.

Replaces Missing Teeth

A dental bridge fills gaps left by one or more missing teeth with a stable, fixed restoration — no removal, no adhesives, and no shifting during meals.

Preserves Jaw Structure

Bridges prevent the bone loss and tooth shifting that occur when gaps are left untreated, maintaining the integrity of your bite and facial structure long term.

Not sure whether you need a crown or a bridge? your dentist will evaluate your tooth or gap with a thorough exam and x-rays, then walk you through the most appropriate and cost-effective restoration option for your specific situation.
Is This Right For You

Is Dental Crowns and Bridges Right for You?

Dental Crowns and Bridges is a good fit if you are:

  • Patients with a large cavity too big for a filling
  • Patients with a cracked or weakened tooth
  • Patients who have had a root canal and need protection
  • Patients with a missing tooth who aren't candidates for an implant

This may not be the right option if:

  • Patients with active gum disease (must be treated first)
  • Patients with inadequate remaining tooth structure (may need extraction + implant instead)
Step By Step

What to Expect During Your Dental Crowns and Bridges Visit

Here is exactly what happens at your appointment at Finch Midland Dental. Knowing each step makes the experience far less intimidating — and lets you relax knowing what comes next.

  1. 1. Numbing and preparation. Local anesthesia is administered — a brief pinch, then nothing. our team gently reshapes the tooth to create space for the crown. You feel pressure and vibration, but no pain.
  2. 2. Digital impression. A small handheld scanner captures the exact shape of your tooth — no gooey impression material. The scan is sent to the lab for crown fabrication.
  3. 3. Temporary crown. A temporary crown is placed to protect the tooth while your final crown is made. You'll leave the office chewing normally, just avoiding sticky foods on that side.
  4. 4. Final placement. About two weeks later, you return for the final crown. our team removes the temporary, tries in the final, checks the fit and bite, and cements it permanently.
Your Options

Crown vs Bridge vs Implant for a Single Missing Tooth

Here is how Dental Crowns and Bridges compares to the main alternatives. our team reviews all options with every patient at Finch Midland Dental so you make the best-informed decision for your situation.

FeatureDental BridgeSingle Implant
Procedure time2 visits over 2–3 weeks3–6 months including healing
Preparation neededGrind 2 neighbor teethImplant into jawbone
Average longevity7–12 years20+ years
Prevents bone lossNoYes
Cleaning at homeSpecial flossers neededNormal floss
Typical cost rangeLower upfrontHigher upfront, better long-term value
Common Concerns

Common Concerns About Dental Crowns and Bridges

These are the questions patients at Finch Midland Dental ask most often before committing to treatment. our team addresses each one honestly at your consultation.

"Crowns require grinding down the tooth — isn't that bad?"

Some removal of tooth structure is necessary, but our team removes the minimum needed for a strong bond. If there isn't enough damage to justify a crown, he'll recommend a more conservative restoration like an inlay or composite filling instead.

"Crowns look fake or show a dark line"

Modern all-ceramic and zirconia crowns are metal-free, so there's no dark margin at the gumline. The translucency matches natural enamel — most patients can't tell which tooth is crowned.

"Bridges seem outdated — shouldn't I just get an implant?"

Implants are often the better long-term choice, but bridges still make sense when bone is inadequate, cost is a constraint, or healing time isn't available. our team will walk you through both options so you can decide with full information.

What to Know

Risks and Considerations of Dental Crowns and Bridges

Every procedure has tradeoffs, and transparent conversation about them is part of informed consent. our team reviews these at your consultation and answers every question before treatment begins.

  • Irreversible removal of tooth structure for preparation
  • Temporary sensitivity to hot and cold after placement
  • Bite may need fine adjustment in the first weeks
  • Crown or bridge may eventually need replacement (10–15+ years typical)
  • Bridge risks the health of anchor teeth (abutments)
Dental crowns and bridges at Finch Midland Dental Scarborough
Our Clinical Approach

How We Approach Dental Crowns and Bridges at Finch Midland Dental

Zirconia and all-ceramic crowns are the default at Finch Midland Dental whenever possible. They are stronger than older PFM (porcelain-fused-to-metal) crowns, match natural tooth color more accurately, and eliminate the dark metal margin at the gumline that can appear over time.

A bridge remains a great option when implants are not possible or affordable, but every patient is walked through both choices. The long-term math often favors an implant — but the right answer depends on bone health, budget, and timeline, and that is a conversation had with every patient.

Reviewed by our team — Finch Midland Dental, Scarborough, ON.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Dental Crowns & Bridges

The lifespan of dental crowns varies depending on the material used, proper care, and oral hygiene. Generally, dental crowns can last between 5 to 15 years or longer.

With proper care, dental bridges can last up to 10 to 15 years or more, depending on the type of bridge, the materials used, and the patient’s oral hygiene habits.

To care for your dental crown, you should brush twice a day, floss daily, use an antibacterial mouthwash, and visit your dentist regularly for cleanings and check-ups.

Getting a dental crown typically involves some mild discomfort, but your dentist will administer local anesthesia to numb the area and make the procedure as comfortable as possible.

Not everyone is a candidate for a dental crown or bridge. Your dentist will evaluate your oral health and determine if a dental crown is the best treatment option for you.

Yes. At our Scarborough dental office we offer dental crowns and bridges to patients from Scarborough and the surrounding area. Contact our office today to schedule an appointment.

With proper care, crowns typically last 10–15 years, and bridges last 7–12 years. Longevity depends on oral hygiene, bite forces, and material choice. our team will review care instructions during your appointment.

Most dental insurance plans cover 50% of crowns and bridges when medically necessary (after a broken tooth, root canal, or lost tooth). We verify your benefits in advance and offer financing options to help with any remaining balance.

Traditional crowns and bridges typically require two visits — one for preparation and impressions, and one for placement of the final restoration about 2 weeks later. A temporary is worn in between.

Medical Disclaimer

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute dental or medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Crown and bridge procedures require removal of some natural tooth structure, which is irreversible. Possible risks include post-procedure sensitivity, bite adjustment needs, and eventual need for replacement. Consult our team or a qualified dental professional regarding any questions about your oral health. Individual results may vary.

Learn More About Dental Crowns & Bridges

Contact our office to discuss how this treatment can help you achieve your dental health goals.