
Dr. Maryz Estedrak, DDS

4.9 Star Rated

100% Custom Porcelain
You stop smiling in photos. You catch yourself chewing on one side. Maybe you've memorized which foods to avoid at dinner with friends. A missing tooth - or several - has a quiet way of rearranging your life.
We hear it from patients every week at EverSmile Dental. Not the dental jargon. Just the small frustrations that pile up. The gap you cover with your lip. The denture that clicks when you laugh. The bridge that started feeling loose two years ago. Whatever brought you to this page, you're not alone, and you're definitely not stuck.
Dental implants have transformed missing tooth replacement into something more like a quiet restoration of who you already are. If you've been searching for implant dentistry near me in Glen Rock, NJ, here's a real look at the procedure, the options that exist, and why so many of our neighbors trust us with this kind of work.


Strip away the marketing language, and a dental implant is three parts working together to mimic a real tooth from root to crown.
First, a small titanium post - about the size and shape of a tooth root - is placed into the jawbone where your missing tooth used to be. Over the next few months, the bone grows around it (a process called osseointegration), turning the post into a permanent anchor. Then a small connector called an abutment is attached, and finally a custom crown is placed on top. The crown is shaped, shaded, and polished to match the teeth around it.
The result is the closest thing modern dentistry has to a real tooth. It doesn't shift when you talk. It doesn't slip out at a wedding. You floss it, brush it, and chew with it the way you would your own. For most people, the natural-looking dental implants we place are the kind that even close friends don't notice - and that's rather the point.
A lot of people assume implants are only for older adults missing all their teeth. They're not. Patients come to us at every age and stage, often with one of these stories:
A single tooth lost years ago to a cracked filling, a sports injury, or just bad luck - and a gap that's slowly widened as neighboring teeth drift toward it.
A denture that fit fine at first but now slides, clicks, or rubs the gum raw by mid-afternoon.
A bridge that's been replaced once or twice and is failing again, taking adjacent teeth with it.
Multiple teeth lost to gum disease, with the rest of the mouth quietly compensating.
Full-arch tooth loss that's started to change the shape of the face - sunken cheeks, a shorter-looking lower jaw, a lip that turns inward.
If any of that sounds familiar, you're a candidate worth evaluating. So is anyone who's just been told they need an extraction and is wondering what comes next.
People sometimes arrive expecting a single procedure called "implants." In reality, there's a spectrum of teeth replacement options, and the right one depends on how many teeth are missing, where they are, and what your jawbone looks like underneath. Here's the short version of each.
The simplest case. One implant, one crown. No grinding down the healthy teeth on either side - which is the major drawback of a traditional bridge. A single tooth implant stands on its own and protects the bone underneath, the same way the original root did.
When two or three teeth are gone in a row, you don't need an implant for each one. Two strategically placed implants can support a small bridge between them, which means fewer surgical sites, less time in the chair, and the same chewing strength.
For patients missing most or all of their upper or lower teeth, full arch dental implants replace the entire row with a fixed set of teeth anchored on four to six implants. This is often referred to as All-on-4 dental implants - a specific technique where four precisely angled implants support a full arch of teeth. It's the closest you can get to a brand-new set of natural teeth in a single, planned treatment.
If you already wear dentures and have made peace with them, this is the upgrade most people don't realize exists. Instead of relying on adhesive and suction, implant supported dentures snap onto two to four implants placed in the jawbone. They stay put when you eat steak, laugh out loud, or sing along to the radio. You can still remove them for cleaning, but the slipping is gone.
In select cases - usually when the surrounding bone is healthy and the situation calls for it - we can place an implant and a temporary crown in a single visit. Same day dental implants aren't right for every patient, but when they are, they spare you months of wearing a flipper or going without a tooth in a visible spot. We'll walk you through whether you're a candidate during your consultation.

We've fitted plenty of bridges and dentures over the years, and they still have their place. But when patients ask us, off the cuff, what we'd choose for ourselves - the answer is almost always implants. Here's why.
A bridge requires your dentist to shave down the healthy teeth on either side of the gap to anchor it. Those teeth are now under more stress than they were designed for, and statistically, they fail sooner. A dental implant leaves your neighboring teeth alone.
A denture sits on top of your gums. The bone underneath, no longer stimulated by tooth roots, slowly shrinks. That's why long-term denture wearers often see their face shape change over the years - the foundation is literally dissolving. Implants act like roots. They tell the bone to stay.
And then there's the lived experience. Dentures need adhesives, soaking, and a different way of eating. Implants don't. You brush and floss them. That's it.
Implant work has gotten dramatically better in the past decade. We've leaned into that - not because new technology is exciting (though it is), but because it produces better outcomes for the people in our chairs.
Every implant case at our practice starts with 3D imaging that maps your jawbone in detail. We can see where the bone is dense, where it's thin, and where major nerves and sinus structures sit. That means we can plan the implant placement to the millimeter before we ever pick up an instrument.
For patients who lack the bone volume to support an implant, we offer grafting techniques that have made it possible to treat cases that, fifteen years ago, would have been told no. Many people who've been told elsewhere that they "aren't candidates" turn out to be - once the foundation is rebuilt.
Crowns and bridges are designed digitally and shaped to match the color, contour, and translucency of the teeth around them. For cosmetic dental implants in the visible smile zone - front teeth, canines, premolars - this level of precision is what separates a tooth that looks like an implant from a tooth that just looks like yours.
This is what advanced implant dentistry looks like in practice: not flash, just better planning, better materials, and better hands.
There's a difference between fixing a tooth and restoring a smile.
A good dental implant specialist thinks about both. The bite has to work. The gum has to heal cleanly around the crown. The shade has to match the teeth next to it under different lighting. And the result has to age well - five, ten, twenty years down the road.
Smile restoration is the bigger picture we keep in mind, even when a patient comes in for a single tooth. The mouth is one connected system. A well-placed implant supports the teeth around it, preserves the jawbone, and keeps your facial structure where it should be. A poorly placed one creates problems that surface years later.
We'd rather take an extra appointment and get it right than rush and revise.
Choosing the best dental implant dentist for your case isn't really about marketing claims. It's about who you trust to put something permanent in your jaw. A few things our patients mention most:
Dr. Maryz Estedrak and our team handle straightforward single-tooth replacements alongside full mouth dental implants and everything in between. The volume matters. So does the variety.
We don't run our schedule like an assembly line. Consultations are real conversations, with the imaging on screen and your questions actually answered. If you've left other offices feeling rushed, you'll notice the difference within the first ten minutes.
3D cone-beam imaging, digital impressions, guided surgical placement, in-house planning. These aren't talking points - they're how we deliver outcomes that look natural and last.
A lot of what's grown this practice has been word of mouth from one patient to a parent, a spouse, a coworker. That's the kind of trust we work to earn, one visit at a time.
Whether you're coming from down the road or from a neighboring town, our office on Midland Avenue is easy to reach, and parking is never the headache it is at hospital-based practices.

The implant consultation is where everything starts, and it's also where most of the anxiety usually goes away.
We'll review your medical and dental history, take 3D imaging when needed, and look closely at the area where the implant will go. We'll talk through your options - the realistic ones for your specific case, not a generic menu - and we'll show you what each one would actually look like. If a staged treatment or referral makes more sense for your situation, we'll tell you that, too.
You'll leave with a clear plan and real answers to the questions you came in with. No pressure to schedule on the spot.
With good oral hygiene and regular checkups, dental implants are designed as a permanent tooth replacement. The titanium post itself can last a lifetime in most patients. The visible crown on top may eventually need to be replaced after many years of wear, similar to any other dental restoration.
That's the goal - and with modern materials and digital design, it's a realistic one. The crown is custom-shaded and shaped to match the teeth on either side. Most patients tell us they forget which tooth is the implant within a few weeks of placement.
Age, by itself, isn't a disqualifier. We've placed implants in patients in their seventies and eighties. What matters more is the health of your jawbone and your general medical status, both of which we evaluate during your consultation.
Yes. Full mouth dental implants - typically using four to six implants per arch - give you a fixed set of teeth that function and look like the originals. For many patients, this is one of the most life-changing procedures we offer.
Often within a couple of weeks. Your first step is the consultation, where we'll build the plan and timeline together. Some patients are eligible for same day dental implants for select tooth positions, while more complex cases benefit from staged treatment.
; ; ;A decades of experience flying, thinks he may have found an image of Amelia Earhart’s lost plane via Google Earth.Justin Myers told Popular Mechanics recently that he began looking through satellite images of Nikumaroro Island after watching a documentary on her final flight."To be totally honest, my interest started after watching a documentary on the National Geographic Channel. It was the next day when curiosity about Nikumaroro Island took me to looking on ."When first looking at images of...
; ; ;
A decades of experience flying, thinks he may have found an image of Amelia Earhart’s lost plane via Google Earth.
Justin Myers told Popular Mechanics recently that he began looking through satellite images of Nikumaroro Island after watching a documentary on her final flight.
"To be totally honest, my interest started after watching a documentary on the National Geographic Channel. It was the next day when curiosity about Nikumaroro Island took me to looking on ."
When first looking at images of Nikumaroro, an uninhabited coral atoll in the Pacific, Myers said he wasn’t trying to find the Lockheed Electra 10E. "I was just putting myself in Amelia and [her navigator] Fred’s shoes."
But then he tried to imagine, as a pilot, "where I would have force landed a light twin aircraft in their position, lost and low on fuel."
Once he zoomed into an area that he thought they might have tried to land, he noticed a "dark-coloured, perfectly straight object" that measured approximately 39 feet, the same as Earhart’s plane.
"I used the measuring tool on Google Earth and to my surprise and mild little shiver it measured approximately 39 ft," he wrote in a blog post.
"It looked man-made," he told Popular Mechanics. "It looked like a section of aircraft fuselage, that was remarkable by itself, let alone the possibility it was Electra 10E NR16020, even though the measurements looked the same."
Earhart was attempting to become the first woman to circumnavigate the globe in 1937 when she and her navigator lost radio contact on July 2 while attempting to land on Howland Island in the Pacific, north of Nikumaroro.
Neither the pair nor their plane have ever been found, sparking nearly a century of professional and amateur investigators to attempt to figure out what happened to them.
Myers said as he continued to look at the satellite imagery, he thought he saw more plane debris, thinking he might have gotten lucky with his sighting.
"There was an element of luck in spotting that aircraft debris, as Mother Nature had revealed what had been buried on the reef for a long time," he said. "I managed to catch some photos before being covered over again by passing weather systems."
Myers wrote in his blog that he attempted to contact several agencies with his findings, but was largely ignored.
The National Transportation Safety Board said the island wasn’t their jurisdiction, so he filed a report with the Australian Transport Safety Bureau but never heard anything back.
He also contacted Purdue University but never heard anything, and contacted an expedition company in the state, but said he hasn’t heard back from them in a while.
Myers is hardly the first person to believe they figured out the mystery of the aviators’ disappearance.
Last year, Purdue announced its own expedition to research the Taraia Object, a visual anomaly also on Nikumaroro that some think could be the plane’s wreckage.
The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery also believes that Nikumaroro is where Earhart went down, based on a huge body of evidence and a dozen visits to the island between 1989 and 2019, according to Archaeologychannel.org.
Tony Romeo, a former Air Force intelligence officer and CEO of Deep Sea Vision, made news a couple of years ago after sonar images from a 2023 expedition showed what looked like a plane on the seafloor near Howland.
But it was soon discovered to just be a natural rock formation with plane-like features.
Still, that hasn’t deterred Myers in his findings.
"The bottom line is from my interests from a child in vintage aircraft and air crash investigation, I can say that is what was once a 12-metre, 2-engine vintage aircraft," he told , while adding the caveat that he’s not sure it’s Earhart’s.
And even if it's not the famed pilot’s plane, "then it’s the that has never been answered. This finding could answer some questions to someone who disappeared many years ago."
This post is sponsored and contributed by The Pool Boss, a Patch Brand Partner.For New Jersey families, the backyard is everything. The pool builder they choose should be too.This is a paid post contributed by a Patch Community Partner. The views expressed in this post are the author's own, and the information presented has not been verified by Patch.Building a custom pool in Ridgewood & Glen Rock is not simply a construction project. It is a test of every contractor's organization, communication, and foll...
This post is sponsored and contributed by The Pool Boss, a Patch Brand Partner.
This is a paid post contributed by a Patch Community Partner. The views expressed in this post are the author's own, and the information presented has not been verified by Patch.
Building a custom pool in Ridgewood & Glen Rock is not simply a construction project. It is a test of every contractor's organization, communication, and follow-through. Known for one of Bergen County's most coveted addresses, a thriving downtown, and Victorian charm, this community has seen too many projects start strong and finish late. The Pool Boss has built its reputation by doing the opposite. A third-generation pool builder based in Wayne, NJ, the company was recently spotlighted on Bloomberg Television's "World's Greatest!" for delivering custom pool installations that are as reliable as they are beautiful.
Reliability is the rarest luxury in home construction, and it is the one thing Ridgewood & Glen Rock homeowners consistently say they cannot find. The Bloomberg "World's Greatest!" segment captured why The Pool Boss stands apart, with celebrity clients Joe and Melissa Gorga speaking directly to the point. "What I love about Chris and The Pool Boss is that they're just punctual," Joe said. For busy Ridgewood & Glen Rock families, a pool builder who starts when promised is not a perk. It is the product.
Fragmented construction projects, where one company designs, another excavates, and a third finishes, are where schedules collapse and quality suffers. The Pool Boss eliminates that risk entirely by operating as a single design-build firm with full ownership of every phase. For Ridgewood & Glen Rock homeowners facing strict Ridgewood zoning ordinances and Bergen County soil and drainage conditions, having one expert team manage the entire project from start to finish makes an enormous practical difference.
The Pool Boss process delivers bespoke pool designs built around each homeowner's vision, with features ranging from cascading waterfalls to sun shelves and integrated outdoor living spaces. Construction is carried out by a hand-selected specialist team, and the entire build is tracked through automated notifications and job-site photography so Ridgewood & Glen Rock clients always know exactly where their project stands.
Ridgewood Village is widely considered one of Bergen County's most desirable addresses, and the standards applied to residential construction reflect that status. The village's zoning board is known for careful review of variance applications, particularly for accessory structures like pool houses, pergolas, and outdoor kitchens that may require setback relief. Ridgewood also enforces strict rules on rear yard impervious coverage, and homeowners must account for all existing patios, decks, and walkways when calculating the allowable pool footprint. Neighboring Glen Rock Borough has its own separate construction department with comparable attention to detail. The Pool Boss prepares thorough, complete permit submissions for both municipalities, anticipating board questions and building the kind of professional documentation that earns approvals faster in Bergen County's most rigorous review environments.
A pool is only as good as the care it receives over time. The Pool Boss understands that, which is why every Ridgewood & Glen Rock installation comes with access to a full range of long-term support services:
The pool building industry has no shortage of companies that promise and underdeliver. The Pool Boss has set itself apart as the most trusted pool builder in Bergen County by doing the opposite: committing to a schedule and keeping it, every time. "We treat these pools like they're ours," says founder Chris Argenziano, and the finished results across Ridgewood & Glen Rock and beyond bear that out.
Whether the goal is a quiet escape or a backyard built for entertaining, Ridgewood & Glen Rock homeowners who work with The Pool Boss consistently describe the same experience: stress-free, on schedule, and exactly what they imagined.
Ready to start your staycation? Visit thepoolbossnj.com to view the Bloomberg feature and schedule your consultation.
Useful Links
Pool installations in Ridgewood & Glen Rock: https://thepoolbossnj.com/best-inground-swimming-pool-builder-in-ridgewood-bergen-county-nj/
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Game Leaders 1 2 3 4 Final Glen Rock (13-11) 15 15 16 18 64 Parsippany (16-5) 12 15 12 5 44 Player Stats 2PT 3PT FTM FTA PTS REB AST BLK STL GP ...
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Final | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Glen Rock (13-11) | 15 | 15 | 16 | 18 | 64 |
Parsippany (16-5) | 12 | 15 | 12 | 5 | 44 |
| 2PT | 3PT | FTM | FTA | PTS | REB | AST | BLK | STL | GP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robert Lopez | 10 | 2 | 10 | 14 | 36 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Zachary Ashkenazy | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Matt Boisits | 2 | 4 | 1 | 4 | 17 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Daniel McCarthy | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Charles Garrett | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Felix Taylor | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Quinn Reardon | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Aidan Schwartz | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Lucas Ashkenazy | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Gautam Krishnan | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Zachary Kaplan | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Totals: | 16 | 7 | 11 | 19 | 64 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 11 |
NJIC TOURNAMENT FINAL PREVIEW Thursday, Feb. 19 at Glen Rock, 4:30 p.m.2-Secaucus (17-7) vs. 1-Glen Rock (18-5)HOW THEY GOT HERESecaucusSecond-seeded Secaucus earned a bye into the semifinals, where the Patriots defeated third-seeded Midland Park 40-27.Glen RockTop-seeded Glen Rock earned a bye into the semifinals and defeated fifth-seeded Dwight-Englewood 60-23.PREVIOUS MEETINGGlen Rock and Secaucus meet for the first time since 2022, when Glen ...
Thursday, Feb. 19 at Glen Rock, 4:30 p.m.
2-Secaucus (17-7) vs. 1-Glen Rock (18-5)
Secaucus
Second-seeded Secaucus earned a bye into the semifinals, where the Patriots defeated third-seeded Midland Park 40-27.
Glen Rock
Top-seeded Glen Rock earned a bye into the semifinals and defeated fifth-seeded Dwight-Englewood 60-23.
Glen Rock and Secaucus meet for the first time since 2022, when Glen Rock defeated the Patriots 43-29.
Secaucus
Secaucus has won three titles in the past seven years, 2018, 2020 and 2024.
Glen Rock
Glen Rock won its first title in program history last season.
Secaucus
Glen Rock
Rely on experience
This is Glen Rock’s second-straight final after winning its first title last season. The Panthers have five players in Mia Vergel de Dios, Ana Landreau, Anna Heuss, Abby Grove and Isabella Flaccavento that played in last year’s final and will bring that experience into this year’s final. Secaucus has won three tournament titles, but hasn’t played in a final since 2024. The Patriots know what it takes to play in these games though, as they are also through to the Hudson County Tournament semifinals as the No. 6 seed.
Spread the ball and rebound
Both Secaucus and Glen Rock have a main scoring threat in Ava Illuzzi and Mia Vergel de Dios, respectively, but both teams also have other weapons offensively. Illuzzi and Vergel de Dios will likely be the main focus of the opposing defenses, so both teams will need to look to other players for an offensive spark. Glen Rock holds the edge on assists, averaging 14.6 per game compared to 11.1 per game for Secaucus, while both teams are about the same when it comes to rebounding. Secaucus is averaging 30.7 per game, while Glen Rock is pulling down 31 per game as a team.
Watch the 3
Secaucus is averaging more than six 3-pointers a game, with Ava D’Addetta, Ava Illuzzi, Londyn Oquendo and Gianna Torrillo leading the way. Glen Rock is averaging almost four a game, with Anna Heuss, Isabella Flaccavento and Mia Vergel de Dios as the main threats.
Secaucus
Brandon Crawley’s birthday brought a winning verdict years in the making.The former New York Rangers prospect, who turned 29 on Saturday, Feb. 7, was awarded $19 million by a Bergen County jury in a closely watched lawsuit against Uber Technologies, Inc., following deliberations in Superior Court in Hackensack.The case stems from a Christmas Day 2018 crash in Glen Rock, when Crawley, a graduate of Bergen Catholic who was a fourth-round draft pick by the Rangers in 2017, suffered career-ending injuries after an Uber driver...
Brandon Crawley’s birthday brought a winning verdict years in the making.
The former New York Rangers prospect, who turned 29 on Saturday, Feb. 7, was awarded $19 million by a Bergen County jury in a closely watched lawsuit against Uber Technologies, Inc., following deliberations in Superior Court in Hackensack.
The case stems from a Christmas Day 2018 crash in Glen Rock, when Crawley, a graduate of Bergen Catholic who was a fourth-round draft pick by the Rangers in 2017, suffered career-ending injuries after an Uber driver veered off the road and slammed into a utility pole, according to a lawsuit filed in October 2020 in Bergen County Superior Court. The crash occurred on South Maple Avenue in Glen Rock, where Crawley was riding as a passenger in an Uber vehicle that left the roadway and struck a utility pole, court filings say.
Jury deliberations began in late January, after a judge denied Uber’s request for summary judgment, ruling that the question of whether drivers are employees or independent contractors must be decided by a jury, according to court records.
Crawley's attorney, Jeff Varcadipane praised the verdict.
"Super proud of our entire team for helping to carry this victory home for our remarkable client, Brandon Crawley!" Varcadipane said on Facebook.
"Brandon was drafted by the NY Rangers in 2017 and immediately signed to an NHL contract, had played in many NHL games and had a huge career ahead of him when a careless Uber driver stole that from him. We are grateful to the jury for acknowledging what he lost and awarding him for a 40m career, which under NJ law is awarded after-taxes, so about half."
Crawley spent five seasons in the American Hockey League, including four seasons with the Hartford Wolf Pack, the Rangers' top minor league affiliate.
"This is the first case in NJ holding Uber liable for its drivers who the jury determined was its agent/employee," Varcadipane said. "It is also the largest jury verdict in the Country against Uber!
The firm said the case focused on Uber’s level of control over drivers, including monitoring, guidelines, vehicle standards, background checks, and its authority to deactivate drivers, despite the company’s position that drivers are independent contractors.
Crawley's legal team argued that Uber drivers qualify as employees or agents under New Jersey law, while Uber has long maintained that its drivers are independent contractors and has also argued in the case that it is not a transportation company, but rather a mobile app that connects riders with drivers.
“This horrendous experience totally changed the trajectory of my life and my career,” Crawley said. “I'm grateful to the court and to the jury for hearing this case, and I hope my experience will lead to changes that lead to greater corporate responsibility and enhanced safety for riders.”
When reached for comment, an Uber spokesperson released the following statement:
"We thank the jury for their service, though we believe the evidence presented at trial warranted a different outcome. It is important to remember this result is specific to this independent driver and is not legal precedent as to Uber, and is a decision of a jury of peers rather than a ruling from a court of law."

If you've been quietly putting this off - researching at midnight, comparing options, weighing whether it's worth it - we'd like to be the conversation that gets you off the fence.
Whether you're considering a single tooth implant, exploring full arch dental implants, or just want a straight answer about implant supported dentures, we're here to walk you through it.
Call us at (201) 773-3992 to schedule your implant consultation, or book online at your convenience. Our office in Glen Rock, NJ welcomes new patients from surrounding communities every week - and there's a good chance we can fit you in this week.
Your smile has been waiting. Let's get it back.
