I have been a lurker on the board for many years trying to decide what to do about my ever shifting teeth. My Journey has been a long one, and yesterday I signed my contract and had my scan done for invisalign! I am excited, and a bit nervous as well. I guess I will be less of a lurker and more of a regular now.
Thanks Everyone! I have a feeling I am going to like this board. Everyone seems so friendly!
It's much nicer being an adult with braces than a kid/teenager with braces. Adults are far more supportive than kids Except that lilyflower person... watch out for her
Thanks Everyone! I have a feeling I am going to like this board. Everyone seems so friendly!
It's much nicer being an adult with braces than a kid/teenager with braces. Adults are far more supportive than kids Except that lilyflower person... watch out for her
LOL, Nitro!
To the OP: let us know when you finally get your date for your aligners. Also, if you have any attachments planned do yourself a favor and put LOTS of lip balm on your lips before the appointment. This was the one thing I didn't think to do and I was super dry.
The problems:
Lower crowding, a slightly rotated upper canine and a deep bite
Hello Everyone,
Well, today was the day. I went in for my appointment. I will have some attachments, but none on my front 4 teeth, so that is great news! I will also have a little bit of IPR on some oversized crowns. They want to do IPR on one of my front teeth, they say it is a wee bit bigger than the other one, but I think I will talk to him about not doing that one. The top aligner felt tight when I put it in and it is a little sore now, so I am getting ready to take some tylenol or advil for that. Oh, I have the turbos on the aligner behind my front teeth. I did anticipate that after reading on the board, as I have a deep bite. What I was not expecting, was that the top edge of the front teeth has a reinforced area that looks like it was crimped for extra strength. It causes the top of the aligner to fold out a bit as well as shrink away from the gum line. It makes it look more noticable.
I never really liked IPR, not because of discomfort, but because I knew I'd never get the enamel back and I worked hard for that enamel damnit Did you decide to do the first day of the new job with, or without your aligners?
PinkPeep wrote:Hello Everyone,
Well, today was the day. I went in for my appointment. I will have some attachments, but none on my front 4 teeth, so that is great news! I will also have a little bit of IPR on some oversized crowns. They want to do IPR on one of my front teeth, they say it is a wee bit bigger than the other one, but I think I will talk to him about not doing that one. The top aligner felt tight when I put it in and it is a little sore now, so I am getting ready to take some tylenol or advil for that. Oh, I have the turbos on the aligner behind my front teeth. I did anticipate that after reading on the board, as I have a deep bite. What I was not expecting, was that the top edge of the front teeth has a reinforced area that looks like it was crimped for extra strength. It causes the top of the aligner to fold out a bit as well as shrink away from the gum line. It makes it look more noticable.
The thing that looks reinforced is a power ridge - they generally serve the purpose for NOT having to put attachments on front teeth and they almost always are used with the bite ramps for deep bite. Generally if you look closely - you should have them on the four front teeth on the top. Where and how many bite ramps you have depends exactly on your bite. I am stuck with 3 for the foreseeable future (mainly because one of my lower central incisors is waaaay back)
From my experience, day 2 is the worst. It was really the one day that I was like "owwww". Pro-tip - take some OTC pain meds before every tray change. Tray 2 will definitely not as hurt as much but you'll still that tight feeling. After about a week, the aligner will feel loose - or even VERY loose. Once I got over the day 2 hump as I called it I was fine - and I'm saying that as someone with power ridges, bite ramps and 21 attachments.
The problems:
Lower crowding, a slightly rotated upper canine and a deep bite