20118 N 67th Ave Ste 308

Glendale, AZ 85308

Treatment Pathways at Smile Science

How we think about care, predictability, and long-term outcomes

Why Dental Treatment Isn’t a Menu of Prices

Many patients come to us expecting dental care to work like a menu: a list of procedures with fixed prices. In reality, dentistry does not work that way.

Two people with “the same tooth problem” often have very different anatomy, bite forces, infection patterns, immune health, oral habits, and long-term risks. The treatment that works predictably for one patient may fail early for another.

That is why we organize care around clinical pathways, not isolated procedures. Each pathway reflects how our dental team actually plans treatment: based on anatomy, complexity, predictability, and longevity, not just the immediate concern.

How We Structure Treatment at Smile Science

Every treatment plan we recommend is shaped by four clinical realities:

Our treatment packages reflect complete clinical pathways, not line-item billing. This approach reduces surprises, improves outcomes, and allows patients to make informed decisions without feeling sold to.

Clinical Treatment Pathways

Below are the most common treatment pathways patients follow. Not every patient fits neatly into one category, but most care falls within these frameworks.

Acute Care & Stabilization Pathways

Who this pathway is for

For patients experiencing pain, infection, swelling, trauma, or sudden changes that require immediate evaluation and stabilization.

What this pathway typically includes

Important Context

This pathway is designed to address urgency, not to complete long-term treatment in a single visit. Many patients transition from stabilization into a preservation or replacement pathway once the underlying issue is fully understood.

Emergency Evaluation & Imaging

Focused examination and diagnostic imaging to identify the cause of pain, infection, or swelling and determine appropriate next steps.

Root Canal + Definitive Restoration

Infection control followed by a restoration designed to protect the tooth from fracture and restore long-term function.

Surgical Extraction + Site Preservation

Removal of a non-restorable tooth with measures taken to preserve bone and prepare the site for future replacement if indicated.

Extraction + Immediate Implant (Select Cases)

Tooth removal and implant placement in a single visit when anatomy, infection control, and primary stability allow for predictable outcomes.

Tooth Preservation Pathways

Who this pathway is for

Patients whose natural teeth can be predictably maintained with appropriate restorative care.

Clinical Reality

Preserving a tooth often requires more than addressing what is visible. Structural integrity, prior restorations, bite forces, and infection history all influence whether preservation is predictable or temporary.

 

What this pathway may include

Why outcomes vary

Two teeth that look similar on the surface may have very different long-term risks. This is why pricing and recommendations vary across patients and offices.

Structural Tooth Preservation Package

Treatment designed to preserve compromised teeth where fracture risk, prior restorations, or bite forces threaten longevity. May include build-up strategies, occlusal management, and restorative design beyond routine fillings.

Premium Esthetic Restoration

Infection control followed by a restoration designed to protect the tooth from fracture and restore long-term function.

Accelerated Treatment Delivery

Removal of a non-restorable tooth with measures taken to preserve bone and prepare the site for future replacement if indicated.

Occlusal Risk Management

Evaluation and adjustment of bite forces to protect restored teeth from overload or premature failure. Often paired with restorative or prosthetic treatment in patients with parafunction or complex occlusion.

Tooth Replacement Pathways

Who this pathway is for

Patients missing teeth or facing tooth loss where preservation is no longer predictable.

Key distinction

Most patients believe they are choosing between “dentures” and “implants.” In reality, patients are choosing between short-term solutions and long-term strategies.

Replacement options exist along a spectrum

What determines the right pathway

Bone anatomy, bite forces, esthetic goals, and long-term expectations all influence which approach is appropriate.

Understanding Implant Pricing

Implant placement only

$1,500

Represents surgical placement of the implant fixture only. Does not include restoration, bite considerations, or long-term responsibility for function.

Complete implant pathway

$4,500

Includes diagnosis, planning, implant placement, restoration, and coordinated follow-up designed for long-term predictability.

Typical Local Market Range

$4,000 - $7,000

In the Glendale and greater Phoenix area, patients commonly encounter full single-tooth implant quotes ranging from ~$4,000 to $7,000, depending on scope, materials, and follow-up structure.

Full-Arch Rehabilitation Pathways

Who this pathway is for

Patients with advanced tooth loss, failing dentition, or long-standing breakdown affecting function and quality of life.

Clinical framing

Full-arch care is not a single procedure. It is a comprehensive reconstruction process involving diagnosis, surgery, prosthetic design, and long-term maintenance planning.

Why prices vary widely

Differences between offices often reflect:

This pathway prioritizes predictability and long-term function over speed or minimal upfront cost.

What determines the right pathway

Bone anatomy, bite forces, esthetic goals, and long-term expectations all influence which approach is appropriate. Patients can reasonably expect us to stand behind comprehensive full-arch care delivered within a long-term doctor–patient relationship.

Full-Arch Rehabilitation Pricing

Full-Arch Implants

$17,000

This pathway includes comprehensive diagnosis, surgical placement of multiple implants, prosthetic design, and coordinated follow-up. It is designed for patients whose anatomy allows for a predictable, stable full-arch reconstruction using a foundational implant strategy appropriate for the patient’s anatomy.

Advanced Reconstruction

$21,000

This pathway is designed for cases requiring increased surgical complexity, additional planning, or enhanced prosthetic design. It is commonly indicated when bone quality, bite forces, or functional demands exceed what standard approaches can reliably support.

Full-Mouth Rehabilitation

Evaluation-dependent

A comprehensive, staged treatment approach designed to restore function, comfort, and stability across the entire bite. Treatment may involve crowns, bridges, selective extractions, implants, bite correction, and occlusal planning based on anatomy, wear patterns, and long-term prognosis.

Remote Anchorage

$30,000

This pathway is reserved for cases where traditional implant placement is not predictable due to severe bone loss or anatomical limitations. It involves advanced surgical planning and execution to achieve stability and long-term function when conventional strategies are not appropriate.

Our goal is to offer the most affordable treatment possible without cutting corners, while maintaining high clinical standards, predictable outcomes, and long-term accountability.

Periodontal Health & Maintenance Pathway

Who this pathway is for

Patients with gum inflammation, bone loss, bleeding, or a history of periodontal disease that places teeth or implants at long-term risk.

Clinical reality

Periodontal disease is a chronic condition that affects the supporting structures of the teeth. Stabilizing gum and bone health is often essential before restorative or implant treatment can succeed.

What this pathway may include

Why this pathway matters

Untreated periodontal disease is a leading cause of tooth and implant failure. Long-term success depends on consistent monitoring and maintenance.

Periodontal Therapy & Maintenance

Comprehensive non-surgical management of gum disease designed to control infection and stabilize periodontal health. May include scaling and root planing, localized antimicrobial therapy, adjunctive laser decontamination, and ongoing maintenance planning based on individual risk.

Advanced Gum Therapy

For patients with more advanced or persistent periodontal disease requiring additional interventions. Treatment may include diode laser therapy, localized antimicrobials such as Arestin, prescription oral rinses like OraCare, and customized maintenance strategies based on response and anatomy.

Surgical Care Pathway

Who this pathway is for

Patients requiring surgical procedures due to anatomy, impaction, infection, or prior dental treatment.

Clinical framing

Surgical dental care requires careful planning, appropriate anesthesia, and controlled execution to minimize complications and support healing.

What this pathway may include

The importance of this pathway

Not all surgical cases are alike. Treatment approach, sedation needs, and recovery planning depend on anatomy, health history, and procedural complexity.

Advanced Surgical Extraction & Reconstruction

Removal of teeth requiring advanced surgical technique due to impaction, proximity to vital structures, infection, or anatomical complexity. This package includes surgical planning, atraumatic technique, and reconstruction measures beyond routine site preservation.

Wisdom Teeth Surgery

Comprehensive surgical management of impacted or symptomatic third molars, including evaluation, surgical removal, and post-operative planning. Designed for cases where anatomy, impaction depth, or nerve proximity require surgical expertise.

Advanced Bone Grafting & Ridge Reconstruction

Reconstruction of deficient alveolar bone to support future implants or prosthetic stability. May involve guided bone regeneration, staged grafting, or large-volume defects requiring advanced planning and healing timelines.

Orthodontic & Alignment Pathway

Who this pathway is for

Patients with misalignment, bite imbalance, or crowding that affects function, wear patterns, or long-term dental stability.

Clinical reality

Tooth position and bite forces play a major role in dental longevity. Alignment treatment is often part of a broader plan to protect restorations and natural teeth.

What this pathway may include

Important considerations

While esthetics often improve with orthodontic treatment, the primary goal is functional balance and reduced long-term risk.

Comprehensive Smile Alignment & Retention

Orthodontic alignment designed to improve function, comfort, and esthetics while supporting long-term stability. This package includes digital treatment planning, active orthodontic therapy, refinement when needed, and structured retention to maintain results after movement is complete.

Bite-Guided Orthodontic Planning

Advanced alignment planning for patients with complex occlusion, wear patterns, or functional concerns. Treatment sequencing and attachment strategy are designed to balance esthetic goals with bite forces, joint health, and restorative considerations.

Cosmetic & Esthetic Enhancement Pathway

Who this pathway is for

Patients seeking esthetic improvements once oral health and function are stable.

Clinical framing

Cosmetic care is most predictable when built on a healthy foundation. Esthetic decisions are guided by anatomy, bite, and long-term maintenance considerations.

What this pathway may include

Why this pathway matters

Cosmetic dentistry is not just about appearance. Tooth shape, alignment, and wear patterns affect speech, comfort, and long-term stability. This pathway keeps esthetic goals grounded in diagnosis, materials, and bite design so results last.

Esthetic Smile Enhancement Planning

Comprehensive esthetic planning that may combine alignment, whitening, and selective restorative refinement to achieve balanced, natural results. This package focuses on sequencing care appropriately rather than performing isolated cosmetic procedures.

Whitening & Esthetic Refinement

Professional whitening delivered as part of a broader esthetic or restorative plan. Often paired with orthodontic alignment or completed restorative care to enhance final shade, symmetry, and overall smile harmony.

Premium Esthetic Restoration

Esthetic-focused restorative treatment emphasizing shade accuracy, contour, and natural translucency. This package may include advanced lab communication, photography, provisional refinement, and additional clinical time to achieve high-level cosmetic outcomes.

How To Choose a Clinical Pathway

Most patients begin with a specific idea of what they want. After evaluation, anatomy and predictability often guide the final decision.

Common patterns we see:

In many of these cases, patients discover that long-term accountability, regulatory oversight, and follow-up protections were not part of the original care model. Our role is to explain trade-offs clearly so patients can choose confidently, without pressure.

Most patients begin with an evaluation to determine which treatment pathway is appropriate.

Why Prices Vary Between Offices

Patients are often surprised by large price differences for seemingly similar treatments. Common reasons include:

Higher prices do not automatically mean better care, but extremely low prices often reflect shortcuts, limited follow-up, or reduced long-term responsibility that shift risk back onto the patient.

Who These Pathways Are Designed For

Designed for

May not be the right fit

Common Questions About Treatment and Pricing

We cannot diagnose conditions online or over the phone, and we do not quote prices for problems we have not evaluated.

Many dental issues involve underlying infection, bone loss, structural damage, or bite forces that are not visible without an in-person exam and imaging. Two patients describing the same concern may require very different levels of care once those factors are identified.

Online pricing can provide general context, but accurate recommendations and exact costs require diagnosis.

Pricing differences often reflect what is included beyond the procedure itself: planning, materials, surgical approach, time allocation, and follow-up care.

Lower prices may reflect unbundled services, limited warranties, temporary solutions, or reduced long-term accountability. Higher prices do not automatically mean better care, but extremely low prices often shift risk back onto the patient.

Patients treated at our practice can reasonably expect continuity of care and accountability. If something requires adjustment or repair due to clinical failure, we are here to address it within the context of a long-term doctor–patient relationship.

This is different from models where treatment is delivered once, with limited follow-up or geographic separation.

Dentistry is biological, and treatment plans sometimes evolve. When anatomy or healing requires an adjustment, we discuss options transparently and revise the plan accordingly.

Our goal is not to lock patients into rigid plans, but to guide care responsibly as conditions become clearer.

Membership plans are designed to provide predictable access to care and preferred member pricing. They do not change clinical recommendations, but they do affect how care is structured and accessed over time.

Membership is not required for evaluation, but it often benefits patients who anticipate ongoing care.

Some offices quote partial procedures, limited-scope care, or temporary solutions rather than complete treatment pathways. Others rely on high-volume or geographically distant models that reduce long-term responsibility for outcomes.

In some cases, low initial pricing is designed to get patients into the office, knowing it is inconvenient to seek alternatives once time has been invested.

Patients should always ask what is included, what is excluded, and what happens if treatment needs to be repaired or replaced after it is completed.

This approach works best for patients who value predictability, long-term outcomes, and clear planning.

It may not be the right fit for patients seeking the lowest possible upfront price or procedure-only care without diagnosis or follow-up.

Yes, when treatment is delivered as a complete clinical pathway, pricing reflects not just the procedure itself, but coordinated planning, execution, and reasonable follow-up care.

Dentistry is biological, and adjustments are sometimes required as healing occurs or function is tested over time. Patients treated within comprehensive pathways can reasonably expect continuity of care and accountability if refinements, adjustments, or repairs are needed due to clinical factors.

This is different from limited-scope or procedure-only pricing models, where responsibility often ends once the procedure is completed.

Long-term success still depends on proper maintenance, oral hygiene, and follow-up visits. Future disease, trauma, or neglect are not predictable or included in any upfront price.

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