
Replacement Options for Incisors – Denture? Bridge? Implant? – PS018
2025-11-18
0:00
52:11
Are you confident in replacing a single missing central incisor?
When is a denture the right option — and when should you consider a bridge or implant instead?
Why is the single central incisor one of the hardest teeth to replace to a patient’s satisfaction?
In this Back to Basics episode, Jaz and Protrusive Student Emma Hutchison explore the unique challenges of replacing a single central incisor. They break down when each option — denture, resin-bonded bridge, conventional bridge, or implant — is appropriate, and the biological and aesthetic factors that influence that decision.
They also share key communication strategies to help you manage expectations, guide patients through realistic treatment choices, and avoid disappointment when dealing with this most visible and demanding tooth.
https://youtu.be/czjPQxKpwPw
Watch PS018 on YouTube
Need to Read it? Check out the Full Episode Transcript below!
Key Takeaways:
Replacing a single central incisor isn’t just about technical skill — it’s about communication and case selection.
Success comes from helping patients understand that a restoration replaces a tooth’s function and appearance, not nature itself.
Clear conversations about expectations, limitations, and maintenance are what turn a difficult aesthetic case into a satisfying long-term result.
Highlights of this episode:
00:00 Teaser
00:28 Intro
01:56 From Dental Nurse to Final-Year Student
07:38 Challenges and Considerations in Replacing Central Incisors
12:51 Patient Communication and Treatment Planning
18:33 Discussing Treatment Options and Enamel Considerations
21:16 Communicating Options and Guiding Patient Decisions
25:51 Choosing Between Fixed and Removable Options
27:10 Midroll
30:31 Choosing Between Fixed and Removable Options
31:05 Handling Old Crowns and Patient Communication
34:17 Conventional vs. Resin-Bonded Bridges
37:57 Occlusal Load, Function, and Implant Considerations
43:40 Digital Workflow in Dentistry
45:54 Managing Aesthetic Expectations
48:34 Final Thoughts and Recommendations
52:59 Outro
🎧 Want to feel confident with prosthodontics?
Explore these essential follow-ups to this episode:
Dentures vs Bridges with Michael Frazis
Crowns vs Onlays with Alan Burgin
Dentures with Finlay Sutton
RBB Masterclass on the Protrusive Guidance App
Quick, practical lessons to sharpen your planning, communication, and anterior aesthetics — all in your pocket.
#ProsthoPerio #OcclusionTMDandSplints #Communication #BreadandButterDentistry
This episode is eligible for 0.75 CE credit via the quiz on Protrusive Guidance.
This episode meets GDC Outcomes C.
AGD Subject Code: 610 – Fixed Prosthodontics
Aim: To provide a clear, clinical overview of replacing a single missing incisor — focusing on when to choose a denture, bridge, or implant, and how to communicate realistic expectations.
Dentists will be able to -
Identify the key biological, functional, and aesthetic challenges in replacing a central incisor.
Compare the indications, advantages, and limitations of dentures, resin-bonded bridges, conventional bridges, and implants.
Communicate realistic outcomes, limitations, and maintenance expectations effectively to patients.
Click below for full episode transcript:
Teaser: Have you heard of something called central dominance?
Teaser:No.
So in the face, the central incisors should be the star of the show, should be in the middle, and the centrals should be like twins. When we lose a central incisor, we have to discuss how was that central incisor lost, and most common cause is trauma. The most important predictor success of a resin bonded bridge is the same as it is for veneers. If you're not sure what the treatment plan should be, you probably haven't asked a patient enough questions.
Jaz's Introduction:Welcome to this Back to Basics episode on replacing the single central incisor, why the single central incisor is the most important tooth, obviously, but so that we can just go a little bit deeper into this topic rather than talking about replacement options in general, which you've already done on the podcast.
There are certain features which are very special when you're replacing the central incisor and why it is regarded as the most difficult treatment to deliver in terms of patient satisfaction expectations. We're joined by the Protrusive student, Emma Hutchison, where we're gonna go into the basic overview of decision making.
When is a denture appropriate? Is it ever appropriate for an incisor? How about bridges and what type, and what are the implant considerations, and actually choosing between these options? I think one of the biggest takeaways you might get from this is communication. There's a specific way I communicate to patients about this, and that's what I think you'll probably take away the most from this episode.
Hello Protruserati. I'm Jaz Gulati and welcome back to the student edition of your favorite dental podcast. I know we call it Protrusive Students, but young practitioners or those returning back to work often find these episodes very valuable. Of course, we've got so much more where this came from.
We've got all sorts of genres and topics covered in Protrusive Podcast and recently on YouTube. We've done the playlist so you can actually pinpoint the different themes of the podcast. On our app, Protrusive Guidance, head over to protrusive.app if you're interested in that. It's the community of the nicest and geekiest dentists in the world. We put some extra videos, not on YouTube, on there as well. Let's now join Emma, and I'll catch you in the outro.
Main Episode:Emma Hutchison, the Protrusive Student, welcome back. How are you doing? How is clinics going? Final year, you've done your exams, but it's the actual more clinical exposure. How's everything going?
[Emma] Mm-hmm. Yeah, it's going good. So as I was saying last time, it's just more, lots more experience this year, which is good. So I'm up in Falkirk in Scotland every second week, just Monday till Friday, nine till five, seeing about four or five patients a day. And then the other second week I'm in Glasgow doing more specialized stuff, watching some consultants in restorative and things. So it's good. It's good. Just plodding along quite nicely, which is good.
[Jaz] Good. And you obviously have been a dental nurse. So once you're seeing four to five patients a day, you have this extra level of insight that maybe your colleagues don't have. Like, in the real world it's 30, 40 patients sometimes, sometimes 12, sometimes one. Like, it's such a variation.
'Cause obviously you've been an implant nurse as well. So what advice do you want to give to your colleagues who are maybe listening to this and they're seeing these four to five patients, and you want to prepare them for the real world? What would you say with your very unique perspective?
[Emma] Yeah, I think when I was working as an implant nurse, I remember speaking to the dentist I was working with and he was saying why he moved to private dentistry initially is just because the real life just isn't like the gold standards that you're taught at dental school. In the NHS especially, you're time restricted.
So I think I do have that in the back of my head. I know that I won't have the luxury of such long appointments when I graduate. So yeah, I'm just getting myself prepared for the real world. 'Cause I am gonna do VT or DFT so that I can work in the NHS to start off with and then see where I go from there.
But I do know that in the back of my mind it's gonna get a lot busier as soon as I start VT practice. So yeah, just that you're not gonna have the best materials that you do in dental school. I know in Glasgow anyway, we tend to have really quite good materials. Good rubber dam. I know I've spoke to you about things like that before, and just that it might not be like that in the real world when I graduate and get out there and start working.
So just to prepare myself for that. I'm aware of it, it's fine. And I'm just trying to relish the opportunities that I have at the moment and the staff around me that I have as well. I think that's one thing.
[Jaz] You've gotta be like a leech, Emma. You've gotta be like a leech, like a sponge.
[Emma] And just ask all the questions whilst you have all these specialists and consultants around you and just take note of everything that they're saying. Especially the way that people communicate with their patients and pick up little things that they're saying to their patients and make it your own. So I'm trying not to wish away my last year, so that's good.
[Jaz] No, enjoy it. Enjoy the comfort and the bubble and the protection you get in school before you enter the big, bad world. Do you think your experience as a nurse and seeing over the shoulder, you're suctioning, you're seeing things close up? Having said that though, I always find that maybe the nurses, we think they've got a great view, but they often don't, especially when you are trying to juggle a million things.
'Cause recently I've been using my clinical loupe camera more and more, and so now the nurses who've been working for 20, 25 years, they're like, "Oh, now I got to see what you are seeing." So maybe it hasn't been that much of an advantage that you come from a nursing background. What do you think about that? Just be honest.
[Emma] I think initially, when I got into dental school, first and second year, it helped obviously. Premolars, molars, all the very basic stuff. And then maybe second, third year when I started to see patients, I was pretty much at the same level as everyone else.
Apart from communication. I've found the big thing is that patient communication has came quite naturally to me,
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