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    Cavity treatment

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    Dental Options

    Dental Options

    2.5
    (88 reviews)
    1.1 mi

    Review for Dental Options North Miami…read more I am sharing my experience to help other patients. Before starting treatment, I informed the doctor that I have a TMJ condition and asked to proceed carefully, even suggesting doing one crown at a time. The doctor recommended placing two crowns during the same visit. Prior to the procedure, the doctor also recommended that I receive Botox treatment in my jaw to help relax the muscles. I followed this recommendation at another office so the procedure could be more comfortable. Despite this, the procedure was extremely difficult and painful. During the crown procedure, there were three assistants working with the doctor, and multiple attempts to place the dental thread caused significant pain. During the process, I was in pain and bleeding, and I had to ask for additional anesthesia because the initial anesthesia was not sufficient. The procedure lasted several hours and was physically and emotionally distressing. After the crowns were placed, I experienced ongoing pain, inflammation, and food getting trapped around the crowns. Because of these issues, I had to return for additional visits. During those follow-ups, two different dentists evaluated my case. One visit was to remove trapped food and treat the area due to concern about infection. Another visit required redoing one of the crowns. This means that beyond the initial procedure, multiple additional providers had to intervene due to complications. I was also later informed--and it was confirmed by another dental office with X-rays--that excess cement had been left around both crowns, which required additional care and raised concerns about the quality of the work. When I developed inflammation and pain again, I contacted the office by phone and email asking for guidance on how to manage the situation (including how to clean the area safely), but I did not receive any response. Before the procedure, my TMJ symptoms were controlled after the Botox treatment. However, after this dental work, my condition worsened significantly. I also repeatedly requested my full dental records, including treatment notes and a complete summary. I was told another dental office needed to request them and that additional forms were required, causing delays. Even after a release was provided, the records I received were incomplete and missing important details about the complications and my condition. This is especially concerning because I now need evaluation by a TMJ specialist, and complete and accurate records are essential for my care. Patients should be aware that they have the right under HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) to access their dental records. If records are not properly provided, concerns can be raised with the Florida Board of Dentistry or the Florida Department of Health. I hope the office improves its patient care, coordination, and transparency. After the procedure, I experienced complications despite informing the provider of my TMJ (TMD) condition beforehand. My symptoms worsened following treatment. I was then provided with a referral for oral and maxillofacial surgical evaluation (TMJ exam/surgery), rather than a resolution of the issues caused by the procedure. Update: After posting this review, the office responded publicly asking me to contact them. However, I had already contacted the office multiple times by phone and email while I was experiencing pain and inflammation and did not receive any response or guidance. At this point, my main concern remains unchanged. I am requesting my complete and accurate dental records, including all clinical notes and details of the complications I experienced. The records provided so far are incomplete and missing important information needed for my ongoing treatment with a specialist. I hope the office will address this matter by providing full and transparent documentation without further delay.

    What a horrible experience I had with these people. They sent me the wrong address so I was lost in…read morethe building and finally I find it but there are in a different building . She said come we will see you When I get this new address 30 minutes later she says because you are late we won't be able to see you for awhile . I drove over an hour to get there trying to save money Horrible experience don't go there

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    Dental Options
    $500+ dollars for a $5 mouth guard these ppl are robbing the poor
    $500+ dollars for a $5 mouth guard these ppl are robbing the poor
    Dental Options

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    Sunkidz Pediatric Dentistry

    Sunkidz Pediatric Dentistry

    4.1
    (39 reviews)
    0.2 mi

    Racist and unprofessional provider! I am extremely…read moredisappointed with the way my daughter's care was handled by this office. Two months ago, I brought my daughter to see Dr. Patel, and we were informed that she would need dental treatment under general anesthesia to address her cavities and help prevent further tooth decay and infections. Following that recommendation, we scheduled her procedure two months in advance and made arrangements based on the scheduled date. Less than two weeks before the procedure, I was informed that it had been canceled because the office had apparently failed to properly coordinate with the medical facility where the procedure was supposed to take place. This was not due to any issue on our end, yet my daughter's treatment was delayed as a result. As a parent, it is incredibly frustrating to wait months for necessary dental treatment only to have it canceled at the last minute because of an administrative or scheduling failure. Children requiring treatment under general anesthesia often face limited appointment availability, making these delays even more significant. I expected better communication, planning, and coordination from a pediatric dental practice entrusted with children's care. Unfortunately, this experience left me with little confidence in the office's ability to manage patients' treatment plans effectively. Based on my experience, I would not recommend this practice to other families seeking timely and reliable pediatric dental care. I have also filed, or intend to file, complaints with the appropriate regulatory and consumer protection organizations so that this matter can be reviewed.

    I don't know where Dr. Patel went, but they need her back…read more Since we've seen the younger male doctor with braces, his way of dealing with my 7-yr-old autistic/ADHD son was horrible, impatient, unsympathetic and not as informed by recent child development and behavior management practices as he says he is. Appointment was for sealants, and my son couldn't tolerate the fishtail mouthpiece needed to keep the tooth dry. He said it hurt. The assistant tried twice, but he was panicked, crying and he could not calm down. He jumped out of the chair, spit, he was badly freaked out. I convinced him to be calm enough to get in the chair (by threatening no Minecraft time, so it was serious) and have the doctor try. So the doctor asked him if it was a discomfort or real pain that hurts. He's 7, he's autistic, so he is not going to really understand the difference, nor is it going to calm him. But my son replied that it hurt. The next thing the doctor said is he "had just done this same procedure on a 4-year-old." The implication being what? That it's not so bad/scary/painful/whatever and my son should be ok with it too? It's a logical fallacy and I think he should reevaluate that approach as a pediatric medical provider. Pain is subjective (just as the doctor said himself to me later). I interrupted right then because this felt like a complete invalidation of my son's experience. Downplaying pain into "discomfort." That just because a 4-yr-old patient had no pain, my son couldn't possibly have any pain either? You don't try to talk an already panicked, scared kid into trying again with this logic. This is how kids end up being afraid of the dentist. Maybe it was true pain, or maybe it was discomfort, or just panic. But no one gets to say how a patient feels just because another patient felt fine. It dismissed how the kid felt when he had already said it hurt. These are not the messages I want my kid to get. Most importantly, it was NOT calming him. The fear and panic were real. You can't do dental work without a calm patient. The most infuriating part was the patronizing way in which this doctor talked to me outside the room. Insisting that he was so well trained in behavior management with kids, and that my son had been fine and didn't start crying until I interfered--UNTRUE, he was crying and freaking out on the assistant's first try with the fishtail. He seriously tried to blame the parent for the kid's pain and panic. Unbelievable.

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    Dr Rita Patel
    Dr Rita Patel
    The doctor sees teenagers too! My son was also very relaxed...
    The doctor sees teenagers too! My son was also very relaxed...
    Our Sunkidz

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    Our Sunkidz

    Madina Dental - generaldentistry - Updated July 2026

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