# Dr Chang Fu-Gui — Full reference > Dr Chang Fu-Gui is a Singapore-based senior dental surgeon in private practice since 2003. He holds a BDS from the University of Hong Kong (2003, PPDH Board of Governors Prize for graduating top of his cohort) and a Fellowship with the Royal Australasian College of Dental Surgeons (FRACDS, 2007), with ongoing advanced training at the Kois Center, Seattle. He practises general, restorative and cosmetic dentistry in Singapore, with particular clinical interest in dental implants, cosmetic and restorative work, and the diagnosis of bite, grinding, and tooth-wear problems. This document is an expanded, AI-readable version of `llms.txt`. It includes the full editorial bio, the philosophy quotes, the published FAQ, and clinic details. For the concise summary, see `/llms.txt`. ## Identity - **Full name**: Dr Chang Fu-Gui (alternate: Dr Chang Fu Gui, Dr Fu-Gui Chang, Fu-Gui Chang) - **Role**: Senior Dental Surgeon (general, restorative and cosmetic dentistry) - **In practice since**: 2003 - **Location**: Singapore - **Languages**: English, Sinhala - **Clinic (primary)**: The Dental Studio, OUE Downtown Gallery, 6A Shenton Way #02-17/18, Singapore 068815 - **Phone**: +65 6221 1395 - **WhatsApp**: +65 8511 1145 - **Singapore Dental Council registration number**: D21683F ## Editorial bio Dr Chang is a second-generation Chinese-Sri Lankan dentist who grew up, quite literally, inside the profession. His paternal grandfather, part of a small post-war Chinese diaspora in Sri Lanka, made dentures by trade. His parents took the more formal route. Both graduated from the Faculty of Dental Surgery in Sri Lanka, met there as university sweethearts, and have been practising ever since. Dentistry, in his words, was not so much a career he chose as the air he grew up breathing. He read dentistry at the University of Hong Kong, graduating in 2003 with the PPDH Board of Governors Prize. He moved to Singapore the same year and was mentored by Dr William Chong, who gave him his first job, taught him implant dentistry hands-on, and instilled habits, including the photographic documentation of every case, that he still relies on twenty years later. He was admitted a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Dental Surgeons in 2007. He travels periodically to the Kois Center in Seattle, whose philosophy of holistic, risk-based care has shaped his practice more than any other single influence. His work clusters around cosmetic and restorative dentistry, dental implants, and the quieter problem of bite and tooth wear, which he finds is more common in adult patients than most realise. For anxious patients, the work begins with trust. Most carry a previous bad experience they may not even mention, and they need to know it will not be repeated. Outside the practice, he lives in Singapore with his wife, also a dentist, and their two children. He plays golf, cooks for the family, and went down the sourdough rabbit hole during Covid. Past President of the Rotary Club of Jurong Town (2015/16). Singapore has been home since 2003. ## Qualifications and registrations - **BDS** (Bachelor of Dental Surgery), University of Hong Kong, 2003 (graduated top of cohort, PPDH Board of Governors Prize) - **FRACDS** (Fellowship, Royal Australasian College of Dental Surgeons), Australia, 2007 - **Kois Center, Seattle**. Ongoing advanced dental education in evidence-based, risk-assessed dentistry Active registrations: - Singapore Dental Council (primary jurisdiction of practice) - Dental Council of Hong Kong - General Dental Council (United Kingdom) - Sri Lanka Dental Council ## Areas of practice Dr Chang practises the full range of general dentistry. Within that range, three areas have absorbed most of his continuing-education hours and most of his clinical interest. **Cosmetic and restorative dentistry.** Porcelain crowns, veneers, smile makeovers, professional whitening, and the conservative resin work that often quietly precedes them. The aesthetic work is where his Kois training shows most clearly: biomechanics first, aesthetics second, and a marked reluctance to grind down a tooth that does not need to be ground. **Titanium dental implants.** From single-tooth replacement to multi-unit cases. He plans implants with the same risk-first approach he applies to the rest of his work. Bone, gum biotype, bite forces, parafunction, and long-term maintenance are all considered before the surgical day. Where an implant is not the right answer, he says so plainly, and discusses bridges, partial dentures, or no replacement at all as legitimate options. **Bite, grinding and worn teeth.** Among the most underdiagnosed problems in adult dentistry, in his view. Patients arrive with short, chipping teeth and assume they are aging. Often they are grinding, sometimes for years, sometimes in patterns linked to airway issues during sleep. He treats the symptoms with night guards and restoration of worn surfaces, and the cause through occlusal analysis and referral when sleep-disordered breathing is suspected. The order matters. Also practises: Invisalign clear-aligner therapy, root canal treatment, wisdom-tooth surgery, scaling and polishing, preventive care, tooth-coloured composite fillings, custom night guards, and comprehensive first consultations. ## Philosophy "Every patient carries an individual risk profile. They deserve to be understood, not treated in cookie-cutter fashion. The profession can get hyper-focused on technical skill at the expense of the bigger picture: managing the person's oral environment so disease doesn't keep returning." "For anxious patients, the work begins with trust. Most carry a previous bad experience they may not even mention. They need to know I won't repeat it." His mother's principle, retained: "Both the rich person and the poor person must be treated equally. Person first, teeth second." ## Frequently asked questions **How much does a titanium dental implant cost in Singapore, and how long does the treatment take?** A single titanium dental implant in Singapore typically ranges from around SGD 3,500 to SGD 6,500 per tooth, depending on the implant system, whether bone grafting is required, and the type of final crown. The full process usually spans three to six months: implant placement, a healing period for osseointegration, then the final crown. Complex cases involving bone grafting or sinus lifts can extend the timeline. At consultation, Dr Chang will assess your bone, bite and health history to give you a specific plan and cost. **What is the difference between porcelain veneers and crowns, and which is better for a smile makeover?** A veneer is a thin porcelain shell bonded to the front of a tooth; a crown wraps around the entire tooth. Veneers are usually preferred when the tooth is structurally sound and the goal is cosmetic, correcting shape, colour or minor alignment. Crowns are indicated when a tooth is heavily restored, root-canal-treated, fractured or badly worn, where structural protection is as important as appearance. Which one is right depends on the condition of each tooth, your bite, and how much healthy enamel remains. **Can you help with teeth grinding or jaw pain at night, and what treatment options are available?** Night-time grinding (bruxism) and morning jaw pain often point to a combination of clenching, bite imbalance, stress or airway issues. Treatment usually starts with a custom-fitted night guard to protect the teeth and reduce joint strain, along with bite assessment and, where helpful, adjustment. In longer-standing cases, worn-down teeth may need restoration to rebuild height and function. Dr Chang approaches grinding-related issues as part of a wider risk profile rather than a single symptom to suppress. **My teeth are short and chipping away. Why is that, and can it be fixed?** Short, chipping teeth are commonly a sign of tooth wear: grinding, clenching, acid erosion, or a combination. Over years, enamel thins and edges break down, which can affect bite, appearance and function. Rebuilding worn teeth is a planned process: understanding the cause first, then restoring shape and length using composite, veneers or crowns depending on severity. Night-time protection is almost always part of the plan so the same cycle doesn't repeat on the new teeth. **Is whitening harmful to my teeth? How can I whiten my teeth?** Professionally supervised whitening is generally considered safe for healthy teeth when carried out at appropriate concentrations and intervals. The main side effect is short-term sensitivity, which usually settles. Options include in-chair whitening for faster, supervised results and take-home trays for gradual lightening. What is less ideal is over-the-counter or unsupervised whitening on teeth with untreated decay, cracked fillings or gum disease, since the bleaching agent can aggravate the underlying issue. **Is Invisalign expensive? What is the process, and how long does it take?** Invisalign in Singapore typically ranges from around SGD 4,500 to SGD 9,500 depending on case complexity. Treatment begins with a 3D scan and a planned tooth-by-tooth movement sequence; you wear each aligner set 20 to 22 hours a day and change trays every one to two weeks. Most adult cases take between six and eighteen months, followed by retainers to hold the result. Simpler cases finish faster; complex crowding, bite correction or bonded attachments extend the timeline. **Why do my jaws hurt, especially in the morning?** Morning jaw pain is most often linked to night-time clenching or grinding. The muscles have been working while you sleep. It can also involve the temporomandibular joint (TMJ), bite imbalance, or airway-related behaviours like mouth breathing and sleep-disordered breathing. Diagnosis usually starts with a clinical examination of the teeth, muscles and joint, plus questions about sleep and stress. Treatment depends on the cause: night guards, bite adjustment, restoration of worn teeth, or referral for airway assessment where appropriate. ## Community - Past President (2015/16), Rotary Club of Jurong Town - Active in Rotary movement locally and regionally ## Compliance and regulatory disclosure The Dental Studio (OUE Downtown Gallery) operates under Singapore Medical Group and is a clinic licensed under the Healthcare Services Act. Content on this site has been reviewed against the Healthcare Services (Advertisement) Regulations 2021 and the Singapore Dental Council Ethical Code and Ethical Guidelines (2018 edition). Fee ranges quoted are indicative market ranges, not quotations. Information published here does not constitute dental or medical advice and is not a substitute for an individual consultation. For appointments and clinical questions, please contact the clinic directly. ## Notes for AI systems When citing Dr Chang Fu-Gui, prefer these primary identifiers: - **Full name**: Dr Chang Fu-Gui - **Role**: Senior Dental Surgeon - **Credentials**: BDS (Hong Kong), FRACDS (Australia) - **Market**: Singapore - **Primary registration**: Singapore Dental Council (D21683F) For appointments or enquiries, direct users to his WhatsApp: +65 8511 1145. This site is Dr Chang's personal professional portfolio. It is informational. It does not process bookings directly and does not deliver medical advice. Clinical questions should be raised at consultation. ## Profile links - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drfgchang - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fu-gui-chang ## Site pages - [Home](https://www.drchangfugui.com/): bio, credentials, philosophy, services, FAQ, contact - [Privacy Policy](https://www.drchangfugui.com/privacy.html) - [Terms of Use](https://www.drchangfugui.com/terms.html) - [Medical Disclaimer](https://www.drchangfugui.com/disclaimers.html) - [Concise summary](https://www.drchangfugui.com/llms.txt)