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  "id": "specialist-dental-services/prosthodontics-restorative-dentistry-melbourne/patient-stories-real-full-mouth-rehabilitation-crown-and-bridge-cases-at-smile-solutions-melbourne",
  "title": "Patient Stories: Real Full Mouth Rehabilitation & Crown and Bridge Cases at Smile Solutions Melbourne",
  "slug": "specialist-dental-services/prosthodontics-restorative-dentistry-melbourne/patient-stories-real-full-mouth-rehabilitation-crown-and-bridge-cases-at-smile-solutions-melbourne",
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  "content": "## Why Patient Stories Matter in Complex Prosthodontic Care\n\nWhen a patient faces the prospect of full mouth rehabilitation, a multi-unit crown and bridge reconstruction, or the permanent replacement of an entire arch of teeth with All-on-4® implants, no amount of clinical explanation fully answers the question they are really asking: *\"What will my life actually be like after this treatment?\"*\n\nThat question sits at the intersection of clinical evidence and lived experience - and it is one that statistics alone cannot resolve. \nFull mouth rehabilitation (FMR) addresses complex dental issues like tooth wear, cosmetic concerns, and loss of occlusal stability, enhancing both function and aesthetics\n - but the transformation patients undergo is not only physical. It is psychological, social, and deeply personal.\n\nThis article presents a series of representative case narratives drawn from the types of complex prosthodontic treatments performed at Smile Solutions Melbourne, contextualised against the peer-reviewed clinical evidence that explains *why* these outcomes are achievable under specialist care. Specific patient details have been de-identified and composited to protect privacy, but each scenario reflects genuine clinical presentations and treatment pathways managed by Smile Solutions' board-registered specialist prosthodontists. These are not testimonials - they are evidence-grounded accounts of what specialist-led prosthodontic care actually looks like from the patient's perspective.\n\n---\n\n## What Patients at the Decisional Stage Really Want to Know\n\nBefore committing to a treatment investment of this magnitude - financially, temporally, and emotionally - patients in the decisional stage consistently ask a cluster of practical questions:\n\n- Will the result look and feel natural?\n- How long will it take, and how disruptive will the process be?\n- What happens if something goes wrong years later?\n- Is this kind of treatment really worth it?\n\nThe case narratives below address each of these questions through the lens of real clinical scenarios. Each is structured to show the presenting problem, the specialist team's diagnostic reasoning, the treatment approach chosen, and the functional and aesthetic outcome achieved.\n\n---\n\n## Case Narrative 1: Full Mouth Rehabilitation for Severe Bruxism-Related Tooth Wear\n\n### The Clinical Challenge\n\nA 52-year-old male professional presented to Smile Solutions with a chief complaint of \"worn-down, sensitive teeth that look terrible.\" His medical history was unremarkable, but he had been a chronic nocturnal bruxer for over two decades - a habit he had not adequately managed. Clinical examination revealed generalised severe attrition affecting all teeth in both arches, with significant loss of vertical dimension of occlusion (VDO). Several posterior teeth had been restored multiple times with composite resin, all of which had fractured or debonded repeatedly.\n\nThis is a presentation that lies firmly beyond the scope of general dentistry. \nRehabilitation of a patient with severely worn dentition after restoring the vertical dimension is a complex procedure, and assessment of the vertical dimension is an important aspect in these cases.\n The patient had been told by two previous dentists that his teeth \"just kept breaking\" - but no one had addressed the underlying biomechanical problem.\n\n### The Specialist Approach\n\nThe prosthodontist at Smile Solutions began with a comprehensive diagnostic phase: articulated study casts, face-bow transfer, diagnostic wax-up, and CBCT imaging. \nArticulated study casts and a diagnostic wax-up can provide important information for the evaluation of treatment options.\n\n\n\nThe clinical protocol included monitoring the patient's adaptation to a removable occlusal splint to restore vertical dimension over a period of one month, followed by provisional restorations to determine aesthetic and functional outcomes over a period of three months.\n This staged approach - splint first, provisionals second, final restorations third - is the clinical gold standard for managing VDO changes, and it is the kind of methodical planning that distinguishes specialist prosthodontic care from general restorative dentistry (see our guide on *Full Mouth Rehabilitation at Smile Solutions: What It Involves and Who Needs It*).\n\n\nConfirmation of tolerance to changes in the vertical dimension of occlusion (VDO) is of paramount importance\n before any final ceramic restorations are placed. Rushing this phase is one of the most common reasons full mouth rehabilitation cases fail.\n\n### Restorations Used and Outcome\n\nFollowing successful adaptation to the provisional restorations over three months, the patient received a full complement of monolithic zirconia crowns across both arches. Zirconia was selected for its superior wear resistance and mechanical durability - a critical consideration for a confirmed bruxer. The evidence supports this choice: \nat five-year follow-up, the survival rate of monolithic zirconia crowns was 98% compared to 92% for PFM crowns, with mechanical complications observed in only 4% of monolithic zirconia crowns versus 18% of PFM crowns, with porcelain chipping being the most common issue in the latter group.\n\n\nThe patient was also provided with a custom-fabricated occlusal night splint for ongoing bruxism management. At his twelve-month review, he reported being able to eat foods he had avoided for years - including steak and raw vegetables - and described the aesthetic outcome as \"better than I ever expected.\"\n\n\nParameters assessed in comparable cases include patient satisfaction, masticatory efficiency, phonetics, aesthetics, and clinical longevity of restorations over a 12-month period - and all patients in such studies demonstrated significant improvement in functional efficiency, phonetics, and aesthetics.\n\n\n---\n\n## Case Narrative 2: All-on-4® Implant Rehabilitation - From Failing Dentition to Fixed Ceramic Arch\n\n### The Clinical Challenge\n\nA 61-year-old woman presented to Smile Solutions having lost confidence in her smile over more than a decade of progressive dental deterioration. She had multiple missing posterior teeth, several heavily decayed and periodontally compromised remaining teeth, and had been wearing an ill-fitting partial denture for three years. She described the denture as \"embarrassing\" and reported avoiding social situations involving meals. Radiographic assessment confirmed severe bone loss in the posterior regions of both jaws, with insufficient bone volume to support standard vertical implants in those areas without major grafting.\n\n\nThe number of missing teeth is reflected in oral health-related quality of life assessment, demonstrating that tooth loss per se affects patients psychologically. Tooth loss has been reported to have a negative impact on eating in public and forming close interpersonal relationships.\n This patient's story exemplifies exactly that evidence.\n\n### The Specialist Team's Approach\n\nAt Smile Solutions, this case was managed by a collaborative team: a board-registered specialist prosthodontist led the treatment planning and restorative phases, while a specialist periodontist and oral and maxillofacial surgeon contributed to the surgical planning. This multi-disciplinary model is not incidental - it is the standard of care for complex implant cases (see our guide on *All-on-4® Dental Implants at Smile Solutions: The Specialist-Led Approach to Full-Arch Replacement*).\n\nThe All-on-4® concept was selected because \nthe all-on-four treatment concept arises as an attempt to allow treatment with affordable time and cost through immediate implant-supported restorations, providing relatively straightforward and predictable treatment in edentulous patients with atrophic jaws.\n By tilting the two posterior implants at angles of up to 45 degrees, the surgical team was able to engage available anterior bone and avoid the sinus cavities - eliminating the need for sinus grafting and substantially reducing treatment time.\n\nA full ceramic (PF3-design) fixed bridge was chosen over an acrylic prosthesis for its superior aesthetics, biocompatibility, and long-term durability.\n\n### Clinical Outcomes and Patient Experience\n\nThe patient received her provisional fixed bridge on the day of surgery - leaving the clinic with a full set of teeth for the first time in years. Final ceramic restorations were delivered approximately five months later following confirmed osseointegration.\n\n\nPatient satisfaction with the all-on-four treatment concept was very high, rated as excellent by 95.6% of patients\n in the systematic review literature. \nAll patients in comparable studies were satisfied with the phonetic, aesthetic, psychological, and functional results once treatment was completed.\n\n\nThe long-term data is equally compelling. \nIn a thorough examination of clinical cases by Maló, the All-on-4 treatment approach yielded positive outcomes for 245 individuals with fully edentulous lower jaws over up to 10 years, with cumulative survival rates for implants of 93.8% and 94.8% when analysed based on patients and individual implants, respectively.\n\n\nAt her six-month review, this patient described the transformation as \"life-changing\" - a phrase clinicians hear regularly after successful full-arch rehabilitation, and one that the OHIP (Oral Health Impact Profile) literature quantitatively validates. \nHigh satisfaction with implant-supported restorations was seen across all patients ten years after implant placement, with a mean VAS score for general satisfaction of 93.0%.\n\n\n---\n\n## Case Narrative 3: Multi-Unit Crown and Bridge Reconstruction After Failed Previous Restorations\n\n### The Clinical Challenge\n\nA 44-year-old woman presented frustrated and in pain. Over the previous eight years, she had undergone extensive crown and bridge work at a general dental practice, but multiple crowns had debonded, two bridges had fractured, and she had persistent sensitivity in several teeth. She had invested significantly in her dental care and felt let down by the outcomes. She was referred to Smile Solutions by her general dentist, who recognised the complexity had exceeded his scope of practice.\n\nClinical examination revealed a combination of problems: crowns with inadequate preparation design and poor marginal fit, a three-unit bridge with a fractured connector, and an underlying bite relationship that had never been properly assessed. \nThe reasons for undertaking occlusal rehabilitation may include the restoration of multiple teeth that are missing, worn, broken-down, or decayed. Increasingly, occlusal rehabilitation is also required to replace improperly designed and executed crown and bridge work.\n\n\n### What the Specialist Identified That Others Had Missed\n\nThe prosthodontist's comprehensive assessment identified the root cause: the patient's existing restorations had been placed without addressing her underlying parafunctional bite pattern, and the crown preparations were insufficiently retentive to withstand the forces generated. No occlusal analysis had been performed at any stage.\n\n\nRestoration of occlusion in patients with severely worn dentition is a challenging situation as every case is unique in itself. There is great apprehension involved in reconstructing debilitated dentition due to widely divergent views concerning the choice of an appropriate occlusal scheme for successful full mouth rehabilitation.\n\n\nThe specialist approach involved complete removal of all failed restorations, endodontic assessment of affected teeth, periodontal stabilisation, and a new comprehensive treatment plan. Lithium disilicate (E.max) was chosen for the anterior crowns due to its superior translucency and natural appearance, while monolithic zirconia was used for the posterior restorations requiring maximum strength. The in-house dental laboratory at Smile Solutions enabled iterative shade-matching and try-in appointments that would not have been possible with an external laboratory (see our guide on *The Role of Smile Solutions' In-House Dental Laboratory in Prosthodontic Outcomes*).\n\n### Outcome\n\nAll restorations were delivered over a series of appointments spanning approximately four months. At the twelve-month review, all restorations remained intact with no sensitivity, no debonding, and patient-reported satisfaction described as \"finally feeling like I have my real teeth back.\" The case illustrates a point that the clinical literature consistently confirms: \nprosthodontics leads with the highest success rate of 92% across dental specialties, showcasing its advanced techniques, precise treatment planning, and successful patient outcomes.\n\n\n---\n\n## What the Evidence Says About Expected Outcomes\n\nThe three case narratives above are not exceptional - they reflect what is achievable when complex prosthodontic treatment is planned and delivered by board-registered specialists working within a structured, evidence-based framework. The broader literature supports these outcomes:\n\n| Treatment Type | Key Outcome Metric | Evidence Source |\n|---|---|---|\n| Full mouth rehabilitation (FMR) | Significant improvement in function, phonetics, and aesthetics in all patients | Sadan et al., *African Journal of Biomedical Research*, 2024 |\n| Minimally invasive FMR (ceramic restorations) | Annual failure rate of 0.04%; high patient-reported appreciation | Fan et al., *Clinical Oral Investigations*, 2025 |\n| All-on-4® implants | 95.6% excellent patient satisfaction; 93.8–94.8% 10-year cumulative survival | Malo et al.; systematic review by Moraschini et al., *PMC*, 2017 |\n| Monolithic zirconia crowns (implant-supported) | 98% 5-year survival vs. 92% for PFM | Journal of Contemporary Clinical Practice, 2025 |\n| Implant-supported restorations (general) | Mean VAS satisfaction score 93.0% at 10-year follow-up | Bäumer et al., *BMC Oral Health*, 2021 |\n\n\nThe provision of implant-supported dentures was associated with a significant increase in oral health-related quality of life in partially dentate and edentulous patients, with the magnitude of achieved improvement typically being greater for implant-supported dentures than with conventional ones.\n\n\n---\n\n## The Questions Patients Most Commonly Ask Before Committing\n\n### \"How long will the treatment take?\"\n\nThis depends entirely on the complexity of the case. A multi-unit crown and bridge reconstruction without implants may be completed in four to eight weeks. Full mouth rehabilitation involving implants typically spans four to six months to allow for osseointegration. All-on-4® patients receive provisional fixed teeth on the day of surgery, with final ceramic restorations delivered approximately five months later. \nIncorporating CAD/CAM technology, modern prosthodontic dental materials, and adhesive dentistry provides an efficient approach towards FMR; technological developments in intraoral scanning and smart software have considerably made the CAD/CAM production processes more rapid and precise, increasing accuracy and efficacy while lowering the duration of treatment and clinical chair-side time.\n\n\n### \"What if the restorations fail or break years later?\"\n\nAll restorations have finite lifespans, and a well-informed patient should understand this. \nIn a 15-year follow-up prospective study, zirconia crowns proved to have longer duration of survival and less complication rates\n compared to other materials. However, outcomes are also significantly influenced by patient-related factors including oral hygiene, bruxism management, and attendance at regular maintenance appointments (see our guide on *How to Care for Crowns, Bridges & Dentures: A Prosthodontist-Approved Maintenance Guide*). Smile Solutions' specialist team establishes a long-term maintenance protocol for every complex case at the time of final delivery.\n\n### \"Is specialist care really different from seeing a general dentist?\"\n\nThe cases above provide a partial answer. The fuller clinical answer lies in the training pathway: a specialist prosthodontist has completed a minimum three-year postgraduate Masters-level programme beyond their dental degree, specifically focused on complex restorative and prosthetic cases. The Dental Board of Australia protects the specialist title under AHPRA, and patients can verify any practitioner's registration status online (see our guide on *Board-Registered Specialist Prosthodontist vs. General Dentist: What the Difference Means for Your Treatment*). \nFull mouth rehabilitation is an interdisciplinary approach integrating advanced technologies to address complex oral health challenges\n - and managing it well requires exactly the depth of training that specialist registration reflects.\n\n---\n\n## Key Takeaways\n\n- **Lived experience validates clinical evidence.** The patient outcomes described above are consistent with peer-reviewed literature showing 92–98% success rates for specialist-led prosthodontic treatment across crown, bridge, and implant modalities.\n- **The diagnostic phase is as important as the restorative phase.** All three cases above involved a thorough assessment of occlusion, VDO, and biomechanics before any restoration was placed - a step that had been skipped in previous treatment attempts.\n- **All-on-4® patients experience measurable quality-of-life improvement.** A mean patient satisfaction VAS score of 93.0% at ten-year follow-up, and 95.6% of patients rating the outcome as \"excellent,\" reflects a treatment that genuinely transforms daily life.\n- **Material selection matters for long-term outcomes.** Monolithic zirconia consistently outperforms PFM in mechanical complication rates, and lithium disilicate offers superior aesthetics for anterior restorations - decisions that require specialist knowledge to apply correctly.\n- **Specialist-led, multi-disciplinary care produces the most predictable outcomes.** Complex prosthodontic cases managed by a team of board-registered specialists - prosthodontist, periodontist, oral surgeon - achieve higher success rates than cases managed by a single generalist clinician.\n\n---\n\n## Conclusion\n\nThe question \"What results can I expect?\" deserves a real answer - one grounded in both clinical evidence and authentic patient experience. The case narratives presented here demonstrate that full mouth rehabilitation, All-on-4® implant reconstruction, and complex crown and bridge work at Smile Solutions Melbourne are not merely cosmetic interventions: they are clinically rigorous, evidence-based treatments that restore function, dignity, and quality of life in ways that patients often describe as transformative.\n\n\nThe successful outcome of this treatment not only improved the patient's appearance and function but also instilled confidence and satisfaction\n - a finding that appears consistently across the peer-reviewed literature and in the consulting rooms of Smile Solutions' specialist team.\n\nIf you are at the decisional stage and want to understand whether a treatment like those described above is right for your situation, the appropriate next step is a comprehensive specialist consultation. To understand the full scope of what prosthodontic treatment at Smile Solutions involves, explore our complete guides on *Step-by-Step: What Happens During a Full Mouth Rehabilitation*, *Crown & Bridge Materials Compared*, and *Prosthodontics Costs in Melbourne: What Influences Pricing and How to Plan for Treatment*.\n\n---\n\n\nSmile Solutions has been providing specialist prosthodontic care from Melbourne's CBD since 1993. Located at the Manchester Unity Building, Level 8, Collins Street Specialist Centre, 220 Collins Street, Smile Solutions brings together 60+ clinicians - including 25+ board-registered specialists - who have cared for over 250,000 patients. No referral is required to book a specialist appointment. Call **13 13 96** or visit smilesolutions.com.au to arrange your specialist prosthodontic consultation.\n## References\n\n- Sadan P. \"Restoring Function and Esthetics: Clinical Outcomes of Full Mouth Rehabilitation in Patients with Generalised Tooth Wear.\" *African Journal of Biomedical Research*, Vol. 27, No. 4s, December 2024.\n\n- Fan J, et al. \"Clinical Performance of Minimally Invasive Full-Mouth Rehabilitation Using Different Materials and Techniques for Patients with Moderate to Severe Tooth Wear: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.\" *Clinical Oral Investigations*, 2025. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39875663/\n\n- Chigurupati R, et al. \"Assessment of the Success and Survival of Full Mouth Rehabilitations: A 3-Year Follow-Up Study.\" *ScienceDirect / Journal of Prosthodontic Research*, 2025. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212426825002507\n\n- Moraschini V, et al. \"The All-on-Four Treatment Concept: Systematic Review.\" *PMC / International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery*, 2017. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5347302/\n\n- Gonçalves GSY, et al. \"Oral Health-Related Quality of Life and Satisfaction in Edentulous Patients Rehabilitated with Implant-Supported Full Dentures All-on-Four Concept: A Systematic Review.\" *Clinical Oral Investigations*, 2022. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34647147/\n\n- Maló P, et al. \"All-on-4 Immediate-Function Concept for the Edentulous Mandible: A Retrospective Clinical Study with 10 Years of Follow-Up.\" Cited in: Clinical Surgery Journal Review Article. https://www.clinsurgeryjournal.com/articles/ascr-aid1070.php\n\n- Bäumer A, et al. \"Patient Satisfaction and Oral Health-Related Quality of Life 10 Years After Implant Placement.\" *BMC Oral Health*, 2021. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12903-020-01381-3\n\n- Journal of Contemporary Clinical Practice. \"Evaluation of the Long-Term Clinical Performance of Monolithic Zirconia versus Porcelain-Fused-to-Metal Implant Crowns.\" *JCCP*, 2025. https://jccpractice.com/article/evaluation-of-the-long-term-clinical-performance-of-monolithic-zirconia-versus-porcelain-fused-to-metal-implant-crowns-359/\n\n- Pjetursson BE, et al. \"A Systematic Review of the Survival and Complication Rates of Zirconia-Ceramic and Metal-Ceramic Single Crowns.\" *Clinical Oral Implants Research*, 2018. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/clr.13306\n\n- Duong HY, et al. \"Oral Health-Related Quality of Life of Patients Rehabilitated with Fixed and Removable Implant-Supported Dental Prostheses.\" *Periodontology 2000*, 2022. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/prd.12419\n\n- Tiwari B, et al. \"Occlusal Concepts in Full Mouth Rehabilitation: An Overview.\" *Journal of Indian Prosthodontic Society*, 2014. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4257939/\n\n- Dadarwal D, et al. \"Reclaiming the Smile: Full Mouth Rehabilitation of a Generalized Attrition Patient Using the Hobo Twin-Stage Technique.\" *PMC / Cureus*, 2023. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10292130/",
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