Patient Experience
I'm 78 and my dentures were a nightmare for a decade—clicking, slipping, causing sores. Dr. Sardar didn't just offer new ones; he spent an hour explaining jawbone resorption and designed implant-supported dentures. The surgery was calm, he played my favorite classical music, and his assistant called me the next day to check on me. For the first time since my 60s, I can eat an apple without fear. He restored more than teeth; he gave me back simple joys.
Our 8-year-old was terrified of dentists after a bad experience elsewhere. Dr. Sardar's approach was magic—he showed her the tools on a stuffed animal first, let her hold the mirror, and explained cavities using a cartoon about 'sugar bugs.' When he found a hidden abscess during the checkup, he handled the emergency root canal on a baby tooth so gently she didn't even realize it was over. She now asks when her next 'tooth adventure' with Dr. Sardar is. He turned fear into fascination.
I needed all four wisdom teeth out, but two were horizontally impacted and tangled with nerve pathways. Three other surgeons called it high-risk. Dr. Sardar presented a 3D-printed model of my jaw, showing exactly how he'd navigate the procedure using piezoelectric surgery to protect the nerves. The precision was incredible—minimal swelling, full sensation intact. His follow-up protocol included evening WhatsApp check-ins for the first three days. This wasn't just surgery; it was architectural mastery of oral anatomy.
As a musician who plays the saxophone, a chipped front tooth from a fall was a professional emergency right before a tour. Dr. Sardar saw me within hours. Instead of a temporary fix, he crafted an immediate ceramic veneer that matched not just the color but the slight micro-cracks and translucency of my natural teeth. He even considered my embouchure pressure. The result is invisible under stage lights. He understands that dental work isn't just functional—it's part of one's identity and livelihood.