Damaged, decayed, worn, or missing teeth can affect more than your smile. They can make it harder to chew comfortably, speak clearly, and feel confident about your oral health. If you are looking for a restorative dentist in Parkland, FL, South Florida Dental Center provides personalized restorative dental care from our nearby Coral Springs office.
Led by Dr. Daniel Cohen, DDS, our team helps Parkland patients repair damaged teeth, replace missing teeth, restore bite function, and improve the strength and appearance of their smiles. Your visit starts with a clear diagnosis, a practical treatment plan, and options that fit your oral health needs.
You may need restorative dental care if a tooth is damaged, weakened, painful, infected, or missing. Even small problems can become more serious when left untreated, so it is best to schedule a visit before pain or damage gets worse.
You may want to see a restorative dentist if you have:
A dental exam helps identify what is causing the problem and which treatment can restore the tooth safely.
Every restorative case is different. The right treatment depends on how much tooth structure remains, whether infection is present, how your bite works, and what result will support your long-term health.
Tooth-colored fillings are used to repair small to moderate cavities or minor tooth damage. They blend with the natural tooth color and help restore strength after decay is removed.
Fillings are often recommended when the tooth still has enough healthy structure to support a smaller repair.
A dental crown covers and protects a tooth that is cracked, weakened, heavily filled, or worn down. Crowns may also be used after root canal treatment or to restore the visible part of a dental implant.
A crown can help restore chewing strength, improve tooth shape, and protect a tooth from further damage.
A dental bridge can replace one or more missing teeth by anchoring to nearby teeth or restorations. Bridges help close gaps, improve chewing, and prevent surrounding teeth from shifting into the empty space.
Dental implants are a long-term option for replacing missing teeth. An implant acts as a replacement tooth root and can support a crown, bridge, or denture, depending on the patient’s needs.
Implants can help restore chewing function and provide a stable replacement that looks and feels natural.
If infection or inflammation reaches the inside of a tooth, root canal treatment may help save the tooth. The infected tissue is removed, the inside of the tooth is cleaned, and the tooth is restored afterward, often with a crown.
Root canal treatment can relieve pain while helping you keep your natural tooth when possible.
For patients missing several teeth, dentures or implant-supported options may help restore appearance and function. A larger restorative plan may combine several treatments to rebuild comfort, chewing ability, and smile confidence.
The best treatment depends on what is happening with your tooth and how much support it needs.
| Dental Concern | Possible Restorative Option | Why It May Help |
|---|---|---|
| Small cavity | Tooth-colored filling | Repairs decay while preserving tooth structure |
| Cracked or weakened tooth | Dental crown | Protects and strengthens the tooth |
| Missing tooth | Dental implant or bridge | Restores chewing and closes the gap |
| Infected tooth | Root canal treatment | Removes infection and may save the tooth |
| Worn or damaged teeth | Crowns or full restorative plan | Rebuilds shape, strength, and function |
| Multiple missing teeth | Dentures or implant-supported options | Restores broader smile function |
During your visit, Dr. Cohen will explain what can be repaired, what needs protection, and which option gives your tooth the best long-term chance.
Dental problems often start small. A cavity may not hurt at first. A crack may only cause mild sensitivity. A missing tooth may feel manageable until nearby teeth begin shifting or chewing becomes uncomfortable.
Delaying care can lead to deeper decay, infection, broken teeth, gum irritation, bite problems, or more expensive treatment later. In some cases, a tooth that could have been repaired with a filling may eventually need a crown, root canal, or extraction.
Restorative dentistry helps address these problems before they become harder to treat. If something feels off, it is better to have it checked early.
Your restorative consultation is designed to help you understand what is happening and what can be done to fix it.
A visit may include:
We check the affected tooth or teeth, gums, bite, and existing dental work.
X-rays help identify decay, infection, bone changes, cracks, or problems below the surface.
You can explain whether you are dealing with pain, chewing problems, missing teeth, cosmetic concerns, or old dental work.
Dr. Cohen will explain your options, including what is urgent, what can wait, and what each treatment is meant to accomplish.
Our team can review insurance, financing, payment plans, and other practical details before treatment begins.
Parkland patients choose South Florida Dental Center because our Coral Springs office provides restorative, cosmetic, emergency, implant, periodontal, and general dental care in one place. That means we can look at the full picture instead of treating one tooth without considering your bite, gums, smile goals, or long-term health.
Our office offers:
Our goal is to help you repair your smile with treatment that feels clear, practical, and built around your needs.
Dr. Daniel Cohen, DDS, leads South Florida Dental Center with a focus on modern dental care, clear communication, and personalized treatment planning. After working as an associate dentist in Manhattan and Brooklyn, he opened South Florida Dental Center in Coral Springs to provide comprehensive care for patients with a wide range of dental needs.
For restorative dentistry, Dr. Cohen looks at more than the damaged tooth. He considers the tooth structure, bite, gum health, appearance, and long-term function before recommending treatment. Whether you need a filling, crown, implant restoration, root canal, or a broader smile restoration plan, his goal is to help you understand your options clearly.
South Florida Dental Center is located at:
7522 Wiles Road, Suite 104
Coral Springs, FL 33067
Our Coral Springs office is convenient for patients from Parkland, Coconut Creek, Margate, Tamarac, Boca Raton, and nearby communities. For many Parkland patients, the drive to our office is typically about 10 to 20 minutes, depending on your starting point and traffic.
New patients can call (954) 569-5608. Current patients can call (954) 755-7971.
A restorative dentist repairs or replaces damaged, decayed, infected, or missing teeth. This may include fillings, crowns, bridges, dental implants, dentures, and root canal treatment.
Yes. South Florida Dental Center is located in Coral Springs and welcomes patients from Parkland and nearby communities.
A filling may work for smaller cavities or minor damage. A crown may be recommended when a tooth is cracked, weakened, heavily filled, or needs stronger protection.
Yes. Missing teeth may be replaced with dental implants, bridges, dentures, or implant-supported options depending on your oral health and goals.
Yes. Same-day urgent care may be available for tooth pain, broken teeth, infections, lost crowns, or other dental problems that need prompt attention.
Cost depends on the treatment needed, the number of teeth involved, materials used, and whether insurance applies. Our team can review your options before treatment begins.
If you have a damaged tooth, missing tooth, old dental work, tooth pain, or trouble chewing, restorative dentistry can help rebuild your oral health and confidence. The best place to start is a consultation that explains what is happening and what treatment options make sense.
At South Florida Dental Center, Dr. Daniel Cohen, DDS and our team help Parkland patients restore their smiles with care that supports comfort, function, and long-term dental health.
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