Kuma to Usagi wa Tomodachi dewa Irarenai - Ch. 44 - Sensational Relief! Compression Remedy

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Built for breeding, a body that can take a beating
preparing and possibly, pussy contracts stronger than gorilla grip.

Once that dick got in
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Fed-Kun's army
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Root canals are terrible and never worth getting. It is better to tear out the tooth entirely than risk the possible after-effects of a root canal. Also, recent dental technology allows things like grinding and sterilizing the tooth, mixing it with bio-plasma extracted from (your) blood solution, and then inserting it into the gap allowing a bone-bridge to form and make sure bridge integrity remains.
Not sure on the latest and greatest dental tech, but I have hard time believing the science says the Root Canal is worse than straight up removal in all cases. There are a lot of effects of a removed tooth, particularly if it leads to a gap(i.e. it isn't the last tooth in the row on that side like say a Wisdom Tooth). On the flip side there are a lot of issues that can make a Root Canal a waste of money and a bad idea. Not every tooth can be 'saved'. A professional assessment and consultation is required.

From my readings back when I had to make a decision the general consensus I saw as that both Root Canal Treatment and Extraction + Implant/other replacement had similar health results. But extraction without replacement had worse due to gapping and the ilk.

Now I have had both done due to poor dental hygiene as a kid and no dentist(no insurance so couldn't afford it) as a teen/young adult. Though the removals have been Wisdom Teeth only, thankfully, which are generally a rule of their own.

With the Root Canal . . . that was caused by another problem I have. I can not for the life of me swallow pills. So as a kid/teen can you guess what I did? I crunched them. And I used one tooth in particular. By the time I was working and had my own insurance that tooth was basically destroyed. Worse my lack of dental visits meant that the pulp was badly infected. There were multiple visits with a dental surgeon to examine and discuss what was to be done. And the good ol' guy(the one I had as a kid before our insurance dropped us) was very upfront about the risks of the Root Canal.

While the root canal 'saves' the tooth, it also weakens it. So Root Canals do frequently fail and end up resulting in an extraction anyways or sometimes being redone, thought that requires another bunch of examinations to determine the viability. People with poor dental hygiene are generally not recommended to get the Root Canal. They'll just be back in this same spot in a short while due to the fact that the Root Canal Tooth will be weakened and more vulnerable than a non Root Canal Tooth. There is also the fact that what may appear to be treatable at first could end up failing for other reasons. Root Canals are difficult for the dentist to perform and if they miss something it won't end well. So you must trust your dentist to be able to do a good job.

In my case the Dentist felt that my dental hygiene after getting my own source of income and basically focusing on myself had drastically improved compared to my childhood/teen years and was guardedly optimistic that the tooth could be saved. The question was if I was going to keep up my improved dental hygiene and work on the areas I was still weak on, because he couldn't in good conscience root canal that tooth if I was going to slip back into poor dental hygiene. He did warn me though that even with good dental hygiene that Root Canals can and do fail and eventually it'll likely be removed, but with good dental hygiene I could possibly get decades more out of the tooth.

The result? I did actually get it recommended to be redone after about a decade, dentist spotted something concerning on the X-rays. No issues yet, but enough to be concerning. Old guy was retired by then, maybe he wouldn't have recommended a redoing at this point, but I'll never know. New dentist wasn't also a dental surgeon so I got recommended a surgeon. I wouldn't recommend him. Nice Guy. Not so great on the bedside manner so to speak. Or maybe my expectations were just set too high. I so loved the ol' guy, there is a reason I sought him out after I got insurance and could afford a dentist again. The original root canal was so smooth and easy that I was wondering why everyone was afraid of root canals. However after the 2nd Root Canal I understand the fear. I do not think this second guy was nearly as deft. But anyways his call was get it redone now or have it removed later when it fails. If I waited until it failed a 2nd Root Canal wouldn't be an option, or least not one he could recommend. Now nearly two decades after the first Root Canal it is still going strong and I didn't need to damage the teeth around it to pay for a bridge(I don't remember all the insurance details back then, but extraction plus implant was well outside what I could afford).

So TL;DR. Root Canals are a treatment not a cureall. Chances are eventually a tooth that is root canaled will need to be removed, but the Root Canal can grant decades to a tooth if you are a good case for one. However, they are a treatment with a lot of variables that you both need to understand and go over with your dentist/dental surgeon so that you can fully understand what you are getting into and the possible health outcomes. A Root Canal isn't always possible or even often the proper treatment(in fact I think I saw a study back then saying 80% of potential root canal cases should be removed rather than treated?). In the cases where a root canal is not recommended or you just don't want one and jump to the endgame you really need to be getting a proper implant or the ilke to properly fill the gap. But the point is that a blanket NEVER EVER to Root Canals is probably just as wrong headed as blanket ALWAYS YES.
 

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