Family Dentist in Edmonds, WA

Family Dentist in Edmonds, WA

Affordable, Personal Dental Care

Distinctive Dentistry is committed to providing exceptional dental services for your entire family. From dental cleanings and checkups to toothaches and cavities, you'll find our family dentistry as distinctive as you are.

Cosmetic Dentistry in Edmonds, WA

Cosmetic Dentistry in Edmonds, WA

Subtle Improvements to Complete Smile Makeovers

State-of-the-Art dental office, professional dentists, decades of experience, and friendly staff, Distinctive Dentistry will create the smile you have always dreamed of.

Sedation Dentistry Edmonds, WA

Sedation Dentistry Edmonds, WA

Oral Sedation & Laughing Gas

Sedation is a process used to establish a relaxed, easy and calm state through the use of sedatives. One of the major benefits of sedation dentistry is that people often feel like their dental procedure lasts only a few minutes, when in fact it might have taken hours to perform allowing more work to be performed in a visit.

Our Team of Dental Professionals

Our Team of Dental Professionals

Destinctive Dentistry

Our team of dedicated dental professionals are here to make your dental experience comfortable and enjoyable. Come in and see why patients in the Edmonds, WA area choose us as their dental home.

Professional Teeth Whitening in Edmonds, WA

Professional Teeth Whitening in Edmonds, WA

Zoom! to a Hollywood Whiter Smile

Feel good and look great with brighter, whiter teeth in less than an hour. Zoom! teeth whitening, the number one patient requested whitening system is safe, effective and very fast.

ClearCorrect Clear Braces

ClearCorrect Clear Braces

For straighter teeth, "The Solution is Clearly Invisible"

Distinctive Dentistry is proud to offer ClearCorrect clear braces for straightening teeth. Clear braces are the clear alternative to metal braces, and are comfortable, virtually invisible and removable.

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From Patients

“I have never been disappointed with my experience at Distinctive Dentistry. The staff is always friendly and very attentive to my needs.”
~Matt Durham

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(White) Tooth Colored Fillings

White Fillings, or Tooth Colored Fillings, are dental fillings that restore and mimic the appearance of your natural tooth. With teeth that have a cavity, fractured or decayed, tooth colored fillings can be used cosmetically to change the color, size and shape of your teeth.

Similiar to dental bonding, this option is particularly useful in closing gaps between teeth; repairing chipped teeth and making teeth appear to be more straight or even. Distinctive Dentistry recommends Tooth Colored Fillings for the majority of their patients. Not only do our patients prefer the absence of metal color on their teeth, they prefer the reassurance of non-amalgam materials used in their dental restorations.

Advantages of Tooth Colored Fillings

  • They closely match natural tooth color and appearance.
  • They do not contain mercury.
  • They bond to tooth structure chemically and do not require the placement of slots, grooves or pins in healthy tooth structure to mechanically retain them.
  • The bonding of white fillings to your teeth restore most of the original strength of the tooth.
  • They may be used on front and back teeth without compromising aesthetics.
  • If damaged they can be repaired.

Most Tooth Colored Fillings (White Fillings) Are Composite Resin Fillings

Tooth colored fillings were first introduced to the American public in the mid 1960's. Since that time tooth colored filling materials have undergone continual improvements in durability, esthetics and material handling. The most versatile and widely used tooth colored filling today is made of a composite resin. A composite is a material in which filler particles are encased in and bound together by a hard matrix material. For composite resin fillings, a fluid matrix of an acrylic, called BIS-GMA, is hardened around glass filler particles to form composite resin.

How Are Composite Resin Fillings Placed?

Tooth colored composite fillings are easily chemically bonded to your teeth. For this reason, the placement of white fillings does not always require numbing the area being restored. Numbing (anesthetizing) the area is often required if tooth decay has progressed beneath the enamel layer and into the underlying dentin layer which surrounds the nerve of the tooth. Once any and all decay is removed, the tooth is cleaned and a tooth primer is applied to the area being restored. The primer opens the pores in the enamel and dentin. A bonding agent is then applied to the open pores and cured. The curing process prepares the bonding agent to adhere to the tooth colored filling material. The filling material is then placed inside the tooth. After shaping the tooth colored filling material to resemble the natural anatomy of your tooth it is hardened by curing with a strong curing light. Once the filling hardens, your bite will be checked to make sure your teeth fit together properly. If the tooth filling extends into the space between your teeth your dentist will also make sure there is room to floss between your teeth properly. Bite fit and adjustments will be made, if necessary, followed by smoothing and polishing of your new filling.

Non-tooth colored alternatives

Non-tooth colored alternatives to composite resin are gold inlays and dental amalgam.

Gold inlays are very long lasting and more bio compatible. The cost is higher however, and placement of gold inlays requires at least two visits because gold inlays are made in a dental laboratory.

Dental amalgam is also very strong, second only to gold among alternatives to tooth colored fillings. Dental amalgam fillings are also the least expensive alternative to white fillings and they require only one visit in order to place them. Drawbacks to dental amalgam use include the use of 43% to 54% of elemental mercury in dental amalgam filling material. As the metal in dental amalgam oxidizes with age the filling material often changes color from silver to black. In addition, placement of dental amalgam fillings at the gum line often causes a dark discoloration of the gum tissue around the filling.

Both metals, gold and dental amalgam, are stronger and longer lasting than composite resin (tooth colored) fillings. Both are also good conductors of heat and cold, and as a result, are more prone to producing tooth sensitivity, especially when the restorations are large or deep.

At Distinctive Dentistry, have chosen not to use (mercury) amalgam fillings at our office.

What is the best choice for tooth fillings?

When it comes to selecting the best material for you and your particular needs, consultation with your dentist is key. Strength, aesthetics, cost and longevity of dental filling materials may vary greatly in different situations and for different patients. Some of the considerations your dentist takes into account when recommending a particular filling material for your teeth are the current condition of the teeth, the size of the restoration area, the location of the teeth involved and the forces (chewing, shearing, grinding, etc.) being placed on the teeth during chewing and other normal movements of your jaw.