Rotated Tooth Correction: see it on your own smile first
Turn a single twisted tooth back into line.
A single rotated tooth — twisted out of line while its neighbours sit straight — is a small defect with a big visual footprint, because it breaks the smooth line the eye expects a smile to follow.
Orthodontics (usually aligners, occasionally a fixed appliance) turns the tooth back into position. Rotations do like to relapse, so the retention plan afterwards is genuinely part of the treatment, not an afterthought.
What your Smyly™ preview shows
Smyly™ shows your smile with the rotated tooth turned back into line — one result, because there's one right position for it.
Preview this on my smileFree · about 40 seconds · your photo deletes within 24 hours, or instantly if you choose
The honest limits of this preview
Single-tooth rotation only. A preview can't see bone, bite, gum health or anything beneath the surface — only a clinical exam can. Treat it as a conversation starter for your dentist, never as a promised result.
Worth asking your dentist
- Can aligners handle my rotation, or does it need fixed braces to control?
- How long would rotating this one tooth take?
- What's the retention plan — rotations are known to relapse?
Related previews
Curious? Look before you decide.
One photo, on your own phone. See your smile with rotated tooth correction and decide with your eyes.
Try a free previewEducational content and visualization only. Smyly™ previews are AI simulations — not medical advice, not a diagnosis, and not a guarantee of results. Individual results vary and depend on a clinical exam by a licensed dentist.