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Las Vegas, Nevada Dental Malpractice Lawyers

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Benefits of Hiring a Dental Malpractice Attorney

Medical malpractice cases are among the most complex in personal injury law — they require proving a healthcare provider deviated from the accepted standard of care, which means hiring medical experts and reviewing extensive records

Most states require a "certificate of merit" or affidavit from a qualified medical expert before you can even file a lawsuit. An attorney coordinates this process and knows which experts to retain.

Hospitals and doctors have powerful insurance companies and defense teams. These cases are aggressively defended because payouts are large and reputation is at stake.

Strict statutes of limitations and notice requirements apply to medical malpractice — many states require shorter filing windows than other injury cases, and some require notifying the provider before suing

Medical malpractice attorneys typically work on contingency and advance the substantial costs of expert witnesses, medical record reviews, and litigation — costs that can reach tens of thousands of dollars

Common Questions About Dental Malpractice

General information only — not legal advice.

What are common dental malpractice claims?

Nerve damage during extractions or implant placement (causing permanent numbness, tingling, or pain), failure to diagnose oral cancer, infections from improper sterilization, wrong tooth extraction, botched root canals, unnecessary procedures performed for profit, failure to monitor patients under sedation, and jaw injuries during surgery. Cosmetic dentistry gone wrong — veneers, crowns, or orthodontic work that causes functional problems — can also be malpractice.

How is dental malpractice different from a bad outcome?

Not every bad result is malpractice. Dental procedures carry inherent risks that patients consent to. Malpractice requires showing the dentist deviated from the accepted standard of care — what a reasonably competent dentist would have done in the same circumstances. An expert dental witness reviews your records and treatment to make this determination.

Is nerve damage from dental work permanent?

It depends on the type and severity of nerve injury. The inferior alveolar nerve and lingual nerve are most commonly affected during wisdom tooth extractions, implant placement, and root canals. Some nerve injuries heal over weeks to months. Others — particularly when the nerve is severed or severely compressed — can result in permanent numbness, pain, or altered sensation. Early evaluation by a nerve specialist is important.