Oral surgery

You must know that it’s sometimes better to get rid of what’s bother us and doesn’t benfits us anymore, so we can get something better. When we take a tooth, know that we do it because it creates more problems than it doesn’t, and we do it to give you something better.
Oral surgery is a branch of dentistry whose activity includes surgical but conservative treatment of nonmaligious diseases, irregularities and traumatism in the mouth cavity, jaw and surrounding structures whose function is closely related to the function of the oral cavity and chewing. Oral surgery is the basis of surgical activity in dentistry and, within primary health care, is incorporated in all aspects of such dental care. Some orally surgical procedures have a significant role in preventing the occurrence of certain irregularities (orthodontic anomalies), ie in their primary prevention. And usually tooth extraction is the simplest and most secure way of solving the compression of the dental string in the individual segments of the jaw. However, most interventions in oral surgery are performed to treat certain illnesses or irregularities, or secondary prevention. These include oral surgery for the removal of affected teeth, apicotomy, cystectomy, removal of benign tumors, and the treatment of injuries to soft, bony and dental tissues. Oral surgery is also used in rehabilitation of patients, in the context of tertiary prevention, when a variety of surgeries from the preprosthetic surgery and implantology are applied.