"Since my brother wasn't bitten — I probably won't be either." This is how the story of Mr. Wojtek began, who came to us after his brother Mr. Piotr's transformation (story #2 from our transformation gallery).
Mr. Piotr regained his smile in 2024. A few implants, a bit of porcelain, a lot of patience — and suddenly Christmas with the whole family at the table. His brother watched. Asked. Listened. Finally, one day he wrote to the reception: "My brother said you don't lie. Can I come?"
Initial condition. Mr. Wojtek said at the consultation: "I'm afraid it's too late."
Two years. Six phases of treatment. One smile.
The treatment plan included practically everything we can do:
In total? Two years. Sometimes weekly, sometimes three-month breaks for bone healing. Mr. Wojtek returned regularly. Sometimes he complained. Sometimes he joked. He always came.
After 2 years. The first words when he saw the result in the mirror: "Oh God. My brother was right."
Three lessons from this story
First — it's never too late. Mr. Wojtek came to us convinced that "it can't be done." It could. Because today dentistry is not just extraction and a denture — it's surgery, bone substitute materials, digital implantology, endodontic microscope. Each of these elements separately opens doors where there was a wall 20 years ago.
Second — it's worth trusting the trust of loved ones. Mr. Wojtek didn't read reviews. He looked at his brother during dinner. That's more honest than stars on Google.
Third — time is on the patient's side. Two years sounds long. But these are two years during which a person lives normally, works, eats, laughs. Just a little more with each passing month.
Your story can look the same
If your story with your teeth has started to sound like "I think I'll just give up" — reach out. Free consultation lasts 30 minutes. It may result in a plan. Or maybe just information that it's not that bad yet.
The names in this story have been changed. Patients have given written consent for the publication of photos and stories.
See other transformations: gallery of 16 patient stories →


