Considering Aligners Without an Orthodontist?

What you should know before starting treatment with a mail-order company, a general dentist, or any non-orthodontist provider.

Before You Start Aligner Treatment, Read This.

Aligners are everywhere now. You can order them online without ever seeing a provider in person, or walk into a general dentist's office and start treatment the same week. The marketing is polished, the process looks simple, and the price is often lower than what you'd pay at an orthodontist's office. But orthodontic treatment is a medical procedure, not a subscription service, and the provider behind your treatment matters more than most people realize before they start. Orthodontists closely study dental records such as photographs, intraoral scans or models, radiographs (panoramic, cephalograms, and CBCT), and cephalometric tracings to evaluate any concerns or potential problems that may be hiding below the surface.

Here are a few things you should consider:

Professional Supervision

Who Is Actually Supervising Your Treatment?

Warning: Mail-order aligner companies often have no in-person evaluation and no ongoing in-person supervision. Some assign remote oversight to a provider who has never examined you. This is not the same as being treated by an orthodontic specialist.

Orthodontic treatment moves teeth through bone. Done incorrectly or without proper evaluation, it can cause tooth and gum loss, bite changes, and damage that is expensive or impossible to reverse. Before treatment begins, an orthodontist reviews a full set of diagnostic records including photographs, intraoral scans or models, panoramic x-rays, cephalometric imaging, and CBCT when indicated. That evaluation catches problems that a selfie or a basic scan simply cannot.

Is Your Treatment Actually Customized for You?

Important: There is no one-size-fits-all approach to orthodontic treatment. A thorough examination of the teeth, their position in the jaws, and the relationship between the upper and lower jaws is required before developing any treatment plan.

A thorough examination of the teeth, their position in the jaws and the relationship of the upper and lower jaws is imperative to developing a custom treatment plan.

Medical Procedure

This Is a Medical Procedure, Not a Product.

Consider this: Straightening teeth is not a cosmetic procedure like whitening. It is a complex biological process that moves teeth through bone and reshapes the way your bite functions.

Think about any other medical procedure with lasting consequences. Would you proceed without an in-person evaluation, a complete set of diagnostic records, and ongoing supervision from a trained specialist?

Orthodontic treatment requires careful diagnosis, precise planning, and regular monitoring. Without it, underlying issues like gum disease, bone loss, or bite problems can go undetected until they become far more difficult and costly to correct.

Treatment Approach Comparison

Mail-Order/DTC Aligners

Selfie or basic scan
No in-person evaluation
Limited supervision
One-size-fits-all approach
No x-rays or comprehensive records

General Dentist with Aligner Certification

General Dentist with Aligner Certification
Diagnostic records taken inconsistently, depends on the practice
Short aligner software certification, not a specialty residency
Orthodontics offered alongside general dental services
Suitable for simple cases, may refer out when cases become complex

Professional Orthodontic Care

Comprehensive clinical examination
In-person evaluation and monitoring
Ongoing orthodontist supervision
Fully customized treatment plan
Complete diagnostic records including x-rays

Want to Know More?

Get comprehensive information and facts about orthodontic treatment to make an informed decision about your oral health.

Your Oral Health Deserves Professional Care

Don't take risks with your smile. Choose a qualified CAO orthodontist who will provide comprehensive evaluation, personalized treatment, and ongoing professional supervision throughout your orthodontic journey.

*Source: American Association of Orthodontists

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