A panoramic X-ray is the wide 'landscape photo' of your mouth. In one image it shows every tooth, both jaws, the sinuses, and the jaw joints — the big picture behind a healthy plan.
Illustration for patient education. Actual diagnosis requires Dr. Nguyen's exam and appropriate imaging.
What a Panoramic X-Ray Is
"Panography" is the everyday name for a panoramic dental X-ray (sometimes called a "pano" or OPG). The machine rotates gently around your head and captures one wide, single image of your entire mouth — upper and lower jaws, all your teeth, the sinuses above your back teeth, and the joints where your jaw hinges.
Think of a bitewing X-ray as a close-up photo of a few teeth, and a panoramic X-ray as the wide landscape photo of the whole scene. Each answers different questions.
What It Helps Us See
Wisdom teeth
Whether they are coming in, stuck (impacted), or sitting near a nerve.
Whole-jaw bone
Broad bone levels, cysts, or changes that a small X-ray would miss.
Sinus & jaw joints
The sinus floor above upper teeth and the jaw (TMJ) joints.
Planning
A starting overview for implants, dentures, braces, or extractions.
Panoramic vs. Other Dental Images
| Image type | Best for | Plain-language message |
|---|---|---|
| Bitewing X-ray | Cavities between teeth, bone levels, old fillings/crowns. | Close-up for everyday cavity checks. |
| Periapical X-ray | The root and tip of one tooth; infection or abscess. | Detail for a single problem tooth. |
| Panoramic (pano) | Whole jaw, wisdom teeth, sinus, jaw joints, big picture. | Wide overview — less detail for tiny cavities. |
| Cone Beam CT (CBCT) | 3D bone, nerve and sinus location, implant planning. | Used selectively when 3D detail matters. |
It is excellent for the big picture, but small cavities between teeth still show up best on close-up bitewing X-rays. Often the two work together.
Is It Safe?
Digital dental X-rays use very low doses of radiation, and modern equipment is designed to keep exposure as low as reasonably possible. Whether and when to take any X-ray is a patient-specific decision — based on your symptoms, history, risk, and what we see in your mouth — not an automatic routine. A digital panoramic image is captured in seconds, without anything placed inside your mouth.
How SoftDental Uses Imaging
One wide 2D image of both jaws, used for the big picture and early planning.
Close-up images for cavities between teeth and single-tooth problems.
3D imaging used selectively for implants, difficult roots, and nerve or sinus location.
A tiny camera that lets you see what we see on a screen, in real time.
Dr. Nguyen chooses imaging based on your symptoms, risk, history, and findings — never as a one-size-fits-all routine.
A panoramic image gives us the whole landscape. It often tells us which questions to ask next — and which closer images we actually need.
— Dr. Minh Nguyen, D.D.S., P.A. · SoftDental HoustonSources & Further Reading
ADA MouthHealthy: dental X-rays emit very low radiation doses, and modern tools and techniques are designed to limit exposure.
ADA: dental radiography should be patient-specific, based on individual needs rather than a fixed routine.
American Academy of Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology: panoramic radiographs provide a broad view of the jaws and are useful for evaluating wisdom teeth, cysts, and overall jaw anatomy.
American Association of Endodontists / AAOMR: cone-beam CT provides 3D views and is used selectively when 3D detail matters, such as implant planning or complex root anatomy.
Due for an exam or imaging?
SoftDental uses digital imaging when it is clinically helpful, and explains exactly what each image shows — in plain language.
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This article is for patient education only and is not a diagnosis or guarantee of treatment outcome. Treatment recommendations depend on exam findings, imaging, medical history, symptoms, clinical judgment, and patient-specific risk.