Patients researching dental implant surgery often find the available information either overly technical or oddly vague. Here is an honest, step-by-step account of what actually happens on the day of surgery at a specialist practice.

Before the Day of Surgery

Arrival and Anesthesia

You arrive at the practice, review consent forms, and anesthesia is delivered. Options include:

The Surgery Itself

A small incision is made in the gum to expose the underlying bone. The implant site is prepared with a sequence of calibrated drills. Under a fully guided protocol (what we use for every case), the drill sequence is directed by a surgical guide — the drills can only enter the bone at the exact position, angle, and depth planned digitally before surgery.

The implant is threaded into place. Depending on the plan, a healing abutment is attached immediately, or a cover screw is placed and the gum is sutured closed for submerged healing. For immediate-load cases, a provisional crown or bridge is attached the same day.

Timing

After Surgery

Osseointegration

Over the next 3–6 months, your bone integrates with the implant surface — a biological process that cannot be rushed. Once integration is complete, the final crown, bridge, or prosthesis is attached. For immediate-load cases, you already have teeth during this phase.

Request a consultation to understand exactly what your case will involve.


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