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Dental Implant Canine Tooth Replacement: What To Expect

Replacing a missing canine with dental implants gives you a stable, natural-looking tooth that helps with biting, guiding your bite, and keeping your smile balanced. Canines play a big role in how your teeth meet and how your face looks. This article explains what to expect when getting a canine replaced with dental implants, who is a good candidate, the treatment options, the procedure steps, recovery, costs, and how to book a consultation.
When to choose dental implants for a missing canine
Common reasons to replace a canine include:
- Trauma or a knocked-out tooth
- Failed root canal
- Congenitally missing canine
- Severe decay
- Advanced periodontal (gum) disease
Choosing dental implants for a missing canine preserves bite guidance, speech, and facial support better than a removable denture or a traditional bridge. Implants replace the tooth root as well as the crown, which helps keep the jawbone healthy and prevents shifting of nearby teeth.
Types of dental implant solutions for canine tooth replacement
Single-tooth implant and crown
A single dental implant topped with a custom crown is the best choice when the teeth beside the canine are healthy. An implant and crown protect adjacent teeth because they don’t need to be ground down like a bridge. Esthetic abutments and high-quality crown materials (zirconia or porcelain-fused-to-zirconia) help match color, shape, and translucency for a natural look.
Implant-supported bridge
If multiple adjacent teeth are missing or weak, an implant-supported bridge uses two or more implants to hold a multi-tooth restoration. This option can be more stable long-term and avoids altering healthy neighboring teeth.
Immediate implant placement and temporization
When the socket and bone are healthy, the implant can sometimes be placed at the same visit as the extraction. A provisional (temporary) tooth can be attached to preserve appearance while the implant heals. Immediate options depend on bone quality and esthetic needs.
What to expect during the dental implants procedure
Consultation and digital planning
Your first visit focuses on exam and planning. CBCT (3D) scans and digital impressions map bone, nerves, and tooth position to plan the implant for ideal esthetics and function. This planning step reduces surprises and shortens treatment time for dental implants in Mesa, AZ.
Smile Simulation and guided surgery
Smile simulation software (PreVu®) can show how your tooth will look. The team may print a surgical guide from the plan to position the implant precisely during surgery. Guided surgery improves predictability and esthetic outcomes.
Surgery, sedation options, and in-office lab workflow
On surgery day, you’ll have sedation choices for comfort. The implant is placed into the bone through a small incision. If immediate temporization is planned, a provisional tooth is attached. An on-site CAD/CAM lab and 3D printer speed fabrication of guides and temporaries, so fewer visits are needed.
Abutment and final crown placement
After osseointegration (implant bonding to bone), usually a few months, the abutment and final crown are placed. You’ll have a try-in to check fit, shape, and color. Minor adjustments ensure a comfortable bite and natural appearance.
Recovery, care, risks, and success rates
Short-term recovery typically includes soreness, swelling, and a soft-food diet for several days. Follow-up appointments check healing and remove sutures as needed. Home care—gentle brushing, flossing around the implant, and routine dental cleanings—keeps the implant healthy.
Common risks include infection, gum recession, and bone loss. Modern digital planning, guided surgery, and in-house lab workflows lower these risks by improving accuracy. Overall success rates for dental implants are high—often above 95%—but factors like smoking, uncontrolled diabetes, and poor oral hygiene can reduce long-term success.
Cost and timeline for dental implants in Mesa, AZ
Typical stages and timeline:
- Consultation and imaging: 1 visit
- Extraction (if needed) and site healing or immediate implant: weeks to months
- Implant placement and healing (osseointegration): 3–6 months (can be shorter with immediate protocols)
- Abutment and final crown: final visits over a few weeks
Costs vary with implant type, need for bone grafting, the lab work involved, and whether immediate temporaries are used. On-site labs and streamlined digital workflows can lower total costs and reduce treatment time. Financing options are often available, but most dental insurance has limited coverage for implants.
Why choose Restore Denture and Implant Center for dental implants in Mesa, AZ
Restore Denture and Implant Center focuses exclusively on implants and dentures, offering personalized care led by Dr. Alyssa Mencini, DMD. Dr. Mencini has advanced implant training and has completed hundreds of full-mouth implant and denture cases while training other doctors. The center uses on-site CBCT, an in-house CAD/CAM lab, Einstein 3D printing, PreVu® smile simulation, and guided-surgery workflows to improve predictability and esthetics while keeping more steps under one roof.
The team provides sedation options and clear pricing to make treatment comfortable and transparent. For a consultation or digital planning appointment for your canine replacement with dental implants in Mesa, AZ, contact Restore Denture and Implant Center to schedule a visit.



