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Prosthodontist vs. General Dentist in Sarasota: What’s the Difference?

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If you’ve ever been told that your dental situation is “complicated” — that you need implants, or a full restoration, or that a previous crown needs to be redone properly — you may have been referred to a specialist without a clear explanation of why. That specialist was likely a prosthodontist. Understanding what that means, and why the distinction matters, helps you make better decisions about your care.

What a Prosthodontist Actually Does

A prosthodontist is a dental specialist whose training focuses specifically on restoring and replacing teeth. After completing four years of dental school — the same foundation as any dentist — a prosthodontist completes an additional three-year residency program accredited by the American Dental Association, focused entirely on the restoration of natural teeth and the replacement of missing ones. The breadth of that training covers dental implants, complex crowns and bridges, full and partial dentures, full-mouth rehabilitation, bite analysis and occlusion, and cosmetic smile design at a level of depth that general dentistry training doesn’t reach.

Board certification — which Dr. Ruth Rojas holds — goes a step beyond the residency. It requires passing a separate, rigorous examination that not all prosthodontists pursue. It’s a voluntary credential that signals a commitment to mastery of the specialty, not just completion of the training.

What a General Dentist Is Trained For

General dentists are excellent at what they do, and what they do covers a wide range of everyday dental needs. Cleanings and preventive care, fillings, basic extractions, straightforward crowns, root canals, and general maintenance of oral health — a skilled general dentist handles all of this well, and for most patients, that’s exactly the level of care needed most of the time.

The difference isn’t quality — it’s scope. General dentistry training is intentionally broad. Prosthodontic training is intentionally deep, within a narrower and more technically demanding domain. A general dentist who encounters a complex implant case or a patient who needs full-arch reconstruction will often refer that patient to a prosthodontist. That referral isn’t a failure; it’s good judgment about matching the complexity of the case to the right level of training.

When It Makes Sense to See a Prosthodontist

There are certain situations where a prosthodontist’s additional training makes a meaningful difference in outcomes:

  • Missing teeth — Whether you need one implant or a full arch restoration, prosthodontists are trained to plan and execute these cases with a level of precision that accounts for bone structure, bite alignment, and the long-term function of the restoration.
  • Complex or failed restorations — If a crown, bridge, or previous implant wasn’t done well and needs to be redone correctly, a prosthodontist’s depth of knowledge in restorative work matters.
  • Full-mouth rehabilitation — When multiple teeth are damaged, worn, or missing and the entire bite needs to be rebuilt, this requires the kind of comprehensive planning that prosthodontic training is specifically designed for.
  • Cosmetic smile transformations — Veneers, whitening, and cosmetic reshaping done in isolation are one thing; a smile transformation that also addresses function, bite, and long-term stability is a different kind of case.
  • TMJ and bite issues — Problems with how the teeth meet can have cascading effects. Prosthodontists understand occlusion — the way teeth function together — in a way that informs treatment differently than a general approach would.

How Dr. Rojas Approaches Cases at Elite 360°

Dr. Ruth Rojas built Elite 360° Dental around the prosthodontic model, which means every patient — not just the complex cases — benefits from that foundation. A routine crown placed by a prosthodontist is placed with a deeper understanding of how it will function within the whole bite. An implant planned by a prosthodontist accounts for the long-term restorative picture, not just the immediate replacement.

The practice is structured so that most patients never need a referral elsewhere. Complex restorations, implants, cosmetic work, and sedation are all handled in-house. That continuity matters — when the same provider who designed your treatment plan is also executing it, there’s no information lost in translation between specialists.

A Note on What to Ask Your Provider

If you’re considering any dental work beyond routine care — implants, significant cosmetic work, or restorations to replace older work that isn’t holding up — it’s reasonable to ask your provider about their training and experience with that specific type of case. A good provider won’t be offended by the question. And if the answer points you toward a specialist, that’s information worth having before you start, not after.

Schedule a Consultation at Elite 360° Dental

Dr. Rojas sees patients for consultations, complex restorations, implant planning, cosmetic work, and full-mouth rehabilitation at 2700 S. Tamiami Trail, Suite 8, in Sarasota. If you have a case that’s been described as complicated, or if you simply want the most qualified team handling your dental care, a consultation is the right first step.

Request an Appointment →

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