From Your First Call to Your Final Smile
No two patients arrive at the same starting point. Some have been researching implants for years. Some are coming directly from a disappointing experience with another provider. Some aren't sure yet what they need — they just know something has to change.
Whatever brought you here, the process at Wise Dental Solutions follows the same structure: understand first, plan carefully, execute precisely, and monitor long term. Here's what that looks like.
The First Call
Your initial contact is a conversation, not a sales pitch. We'll ask about your concerns, your history, and what you're hoping to achieve. We'll answer any questions you have about what a consultation involves and what to expect. If it sounds like we're a fit, we'll schedule your appointment.
Consultation
This appointment is about listening and understanding. Many patients come in feeling embarrassed, frustrated, or discouraged after years of dental challenges. That's not unusual, and there's no judgment here.
We review your scans, photos, and anatomy together — on screen, so you can see exactly what we're seeing. By the end of this appointment, you'll understand your situation clearly. You'll know what your options are and why they're your options, based on your specific anatomy.
Diagnostics and Digital Planning
We gather a CBCT scan, digital impressions, photographs, and a thorough medical history. This diagnostic information lets us plan your treatment digitally before any procedure begins — determining implant positions, angles, and depths in advance for maximum precision and predictability.
This planning phase is one of the most important parts of modern implant dentistry. It improves safety, reduces surgical time, and allows us to walk you through the planned outcome before anything happens.
Treatment Design
This is where we determine the right approach for you: FP1, FP2, FP3, single implants, staged reconstruction, grafting first — or a combination. We discuss timelines, healing expectations, financial options, and what long-term maintenance looks like.
We want you going into surgery with a complete picture, not a vague plan.
Surgery
Patients are frequently surprised by how organized and calm surgery feels. Because every detail has been planned in advance, the procedure is structured and predictable. You'll understand what's happening before it happens.
Most full-arch patients go home the same day with a transitional prosthesis in place.
Healing and Provisionalization
This phase is critically important biologically. We monitor implant integration, tissue response, and bite function carefully. For full-arch cases, this typically involves a second set of 3D-printed provisional teeth — designed around how you speak, eat, and smile — before we finalize the design for the permanent restoration.
We don't skip this step.
Final Restoration
The final prosthesis is designed not just for esthetics, but for speech, chewing mechanics, cleanability, comfort, and long-term maintainability. Materials are chosen based on what will serve you best over a ten-to-twenty-year horizon.
When the final restoration is delivered, it's been refined and pressure-tested through the provisional phase so that what you receive is as close to perfect as planning and biology allow.
Long-Term Maintenance
Implants are not “set it and forget it.” Long-term maintenance is what separates successful cases from the revision cases we see years later. We continue monitoring tissue health, bite forces, hygiene access, and prosthetic stability over time.
This ongoing relationship is built into how we practice — because the goal was never just to deliver a restoration. It was to give you something that lasts.
“I spend a lot of time educating patients during every appointment. I want patients to feel informed and safe — not pressured. When patients truly understand their options, they make better decisions, and they feel more confident moving forward.”
— Dr. Micah Weisenberg