02 — Treatment

A full mouth, rebuilt as one plan.

Rehabilitating an entire mouth is not the same as treating one tooth at a time. The bite has to balance, the upper and lower arches have to meet, and the work has to age well under decades of use. We plan the whole arch — surgical, restorative, prosthetic — as a single treatment, not as a sequence of separate visits.

What this includes
01

Full Arch Reconstruction

When an entire arch — upper, lower, or both — has been compromised by long-term decay, loss or failing previous work, we rebuild it as one. Implants where teeth are missing; crowns or onlays where teeth can still be saved. The new bite is calibrated to the opposing arch, not to the broken state it is replacing.

02

Zygomatic Anchorage

For patients whose upper jaw has lost too much bone for conventional implants, zygomatic implants anchor into the cheekbones. This bypasses the year-long bone-grafting pathway that would otherwise be the only alternative. Used selectively, with full 3D planning, and only when the case genuinely calls for it.

03

Multi-disciplinary Planning

A full mouth case is reviewed by the surgical team, the prosthodontist and the in-house laboratory together before the first incision. Surgical guides are printed from the CBCT scan; provisional restorations are designed before they are needed. The result is fewer return visits and a more predictable final outcome.

04

Sedation Options

Where appropriate, full mouth procedures can be performed under conscious sedation by an anaesthesiologist, reducing the perceived length of long appointments. Discussed at consultation; not the default and not recommended for every patient. Medical fitness review precedes any sedated session.

The visit-by-visit plan
  1. Trip 1 · Day 1 — arrival

    Full consultation, CBCT scan, intraoral scan and photographic record. A complete treatment plan is built and reviewed with you before any clinical work begins.

  2. Trip 1 · Days 2 to 5 — departure

    Extractions, implant placement, bone work and any zygomatic anchorage performed under local anaesthesia or sedation. A fixed temporary arch is fitted the same day where bone quality allows. The first trip is four nights, five days.

  3. Healing window — 3 to 6 months

    You fly home with the temporary in place while the implants integrate. We review healing photos remotely and adjust the temporary by post if it needs softening.

  4. Trip 2 · 5 nights, 6 days

    You return for a second trip of five nights, six days. The final Zirconium bridge or full-arch prosthesis is fitted in our in-house lab, the bite calibrated against the opposing arch and polished, and a detailed aftercare protocol issued before you fly home.

Materials we use
  • Medical-grade titanium implant bodies for the surgical phase
  • Full-arch Zirconium bridges milled in our in-house lab
  • Acrylic or PMMA for transitional temporaries during the healing window
  • Custom abutments shaped to the gum margin, not stock geometry
Who this is for
  • Adults whose existing dentition is beyond conservative restoration
  • Patients with failing legacy bridgework or removable dentures seeking a fixed alternative
  • Sufficient medical fitness for a longer surgical session — reviewed at consultation
  • Comfortable committing to a four-to-six month overall timeline including a return visit

Plan a consultation

Tell us what you're considering. We'll write back with a plan, not a sales pitch.