Culpeper Dental CareGentle · Modern · Family

Condition

Impacted Tooth
in plain English.

A tooth that hasn’t fully come in because it’s blocked by bone, gum, or another tooth. Wisdom teeth and upper canines are the most common offenders.

The definition, in plain English

A tooth that hasn’t fully come in because it’s blocked by bone, gum, or another tooth. Wisdom teeth and upper canines are the most common offenders.

Why this matters when you’re sitting in the chair

You won’t hear most clinical terms in a Culpeper Dental Care visit without a follow-up sentence in everyday language — that’s the standard Dr. Sanie holds for every conversation. But it’s useful to know “impacted tooth” ahead of time so you can ask better questions and recognize when something on your treatment plan refers to it. If a recommendation mentions impacted toothand you want a second pass at the explanation, just ask — that’s exactly what your visit is for.

When “impacted tooth” comes up at Culpeper Dental Care

Most patients encounter this term during one of three moments: while reviewing a treatment plan, when comparing options with Dr. Sanie, or while reading after-care instructions at home. We always pair the clinical word with the plain-English version so nothing about your care feels mysterious. If you’d like us to walk through the term in the context of your own mouth, mention it at your next exam.

Have a question about this?

The dental dictionary is a starting point, not a substitute for an exam. If you want this term explained for your own situation, call 540-418-0825 or book your visit at culpeperdentist.com/book-online.

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