Curated cosmetic and restorative dentistry in Versova
Comprehensive restorative planning

Full Mouth Rehabilitation in Versova

Rebuild comfort, function, and confidence together.

Full mouth rehabilitation coordinates treatment across many teeth when isolated repairs are no longer enough. The plan may combine restorative, implant, gum, bite, or preventive care in deliberate phases.

Whole-mouth diagnosisPhased treatment roadmapFunction and aesthetics
Dr. Disha Sanghvi award and recognition display
One plan for connected problems. Wear, missing teeth, older restorations, bite forces, and appearance are assessed as one system.
Understanding rehabilitation

Comprehensive treatment built in manageable phases.

Full mouth rehabilitation is not one procedure. It is a coordinated plan for multiple teeth when health, comfort, function, strength, or smile appearance have been broadly affected.

02

What the assessment covers

Teeth, gums, jaw support, bite, muscles, existing restorations, hygiene, habits, medical context, and the patient’s priorities are reviewed.

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What treatment may include

The plan can combine several disciplines.

  • Crowns, onlays, or bonding
  • Root canal or gum treatment
  • Implants or prosthetic replacement
  • Bite or protective appliance planning
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Why provisional stages matter

Temporary or trial restorations may help assess comfort, function, appearance, and adaptation before definitive work is completed.

Signs a broader plan may help

When single-tooth repairs keep becoming a cycle.

A comprehensive review can clarify priorities and prevent unrelated treatments from working against each other.

  • Patients with generalized tooth wear or bite collapse
  • Multiple damaged, broken, or heavily restored teeth
  • Missing teeth combined with functional or aesthetic problems
  • Patients who need staged full-mouth rebuilding
Planning the scope

Comprehensive does not mean everything at once.

Treatment can be phased around urgency, biology, recovery, priorities, and budget.

Stabilise first

Control disease and protect structure

Pain, infection, decay, gum inflammation, fractures, and unstable temporary issues are addressed before definitive reconstruction.

  • Urgent and preventive care
  • Teeth with uncertain prognosis
  • Temporary protection
Rebuild deliberately

Restore the planned bite and smile

Definitive restorations or replacements are sequenced after the foundations are stable and the design has been reviewed.

  • Phased restorations
  • Implant or prosthetic stages
  • Final bite and maintenance review

A full-mouth plan should explain which teeth can be preserved, which options are elective, what can be phased, and how the result will be maintained.

How treatment is planned

Diagnose broadly. Treat in priorities.

Full mouth rehabilitation is used when several teeth need coordinated rebuilding because of wear, fracture, missing teeth, bite instability, or older failing restorations.

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Comprehensive assessment

Wear, damage, missing teeth, bite, and existing restorations are reviewed together.

02

Priority planning

Urgent issues and structural needs are stabilized first.

03

Phased execution

Root canal care, crowns, implants, or prosthetics are sequenced appropriately.

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Final refinement

The bite, appearance, and maintenance plan are finalized at the end of treatment.

Dr. Disha Sanghvi at InstaSmiles Dental
Your treating dentist

Clear options, conservative recommendations.

Dr. Disha Sanghvi, B.D.S. (MUM), Gold Medalist, begins with diagnosis and a discussion of what you want to improve. Treatment is recommended only after the health of the teeth, gums, bite, and long-term maintenance needs are considered.

Dr. Disha SanghviB.D.S. (MUM)Gold MedalistVersova, Andheri West

This page provides general patient information and does not replace an examination, diagnosis, or individual treatment advice.

Protecting the reconstruction

Maintenance is part of the treatment plan.

Rehabilitation cases need maintenance, review appointments, and sometimes protective appliances such as night guards to protect the long-term result.

Professional reviews, cleaning, home care, bite monitoring, and a protective night guard when indicated help preserve extensive restorative work.

Need a complete treatment roadmap for multiple damaged teeth?

Book a consultation at InstaSmiles Dental to discuss whether full mouth rehabilitation is the right restorative approach for you.

Frequently asked questions

What is full mouth rehabilitation?
Full mouth rehabilitation is a coordinated plan to restore multiple teeth across the mouth when function, strength, aesthetics, or bite stability have been compromised.
Does full mouth rehabilitation always include implants?
Not always. Depending on the case, treatment may involve crowns, root canal care, prosthetics, implants, bite correction, or a combination of approaches.
How long does full mouth rehabilitation take?
The timeline depends on the complexity of the case, how many teeth are involved, whether implants or healing phases are needed, and how treatment is staged.
Is full mouth rehabilitation the same as a smile makeover?
Not necessarily. A smile makeover is usually aesthetic-led, while full mouth rehabilitation often addresses function, wear, damage, missing teeth, bite stability, and health as well as appearance.
Can full mouth rehabilitation be completed in phases?
Yes. Complex care is often divided into stabilization, provisional, healing, and definitive phases based on priorities, biology, recovery, and practical considerations.
Will every tooth need a crown?
No. Treatment should be tooth-specific. Depending on the condition, options may include monitoring, bonding, onlays, crowns, root canal care, implants, or other prosthetic solutions.
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