Charles Howenstine DDS on Why Dentistry Should Focus More on Arresting Disease Than Repairing Damage

Michigan, USA, 25th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — In modern dentistry, many conversations focus on repairing damage. Fillings replace decay, crowns restore broken teeth, and advanced procedures address long-standing oral health issues. While these treatments remain important, some dentists believe the profession should place far greater emphasis on a different concept: arresting disease before it progresses.

Charles Howenstine DDS, a Stevensville, Michigan dentist and practice owner, believes that one of the most important shifts in dental care is recognizing the power of early intervention and preventive strategies designed to arrest dental disease.

“In dentistry, the word ‘arrest’ has a very specific meaning,” says Dr. Howenstine. “When we say a condition is arrested, we mean the disease process has stopped progressing. The damage is no longer actively spreading.”

This concept can apply to several common oral health issues. For example, an arrested caries lesion refers to tooth decay that is visible but no longer actively damaging the tooth. The bacteria responsible for the decay are no longer progressing deeper into the enamel or dentin. Similarly, early gum inflammation can sometimes be managed in ways that arrest the progression toward more severe periodontal disease.

According to Dr. Howenstine, focusing on arresting disease early can significantly change how patients experience dental care.

A Shift From Reaction to Prevention
Dr. Howenstine’s perspective comes from an unusual professional background that includes both finance and dentistry. Raised in Rice Lake, Wisconsin, he graduated from Rice Lake High School in 1999 and earned a Finance degree from Marquette University in 2003. After working at Capstone Investments, he later returned to school through the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee and completed dental training at the Marquette University School of Dentistry in 2011.

That early experience in finance shaped how he evaluates risk and long-term outcomes.

“In finance, small problems can grow quickly if they aren’t addressed early,” he explains. “Dental disease works in a very similar way. If you can arrest the issue early, you prevent much larger consequences later.”

Following graduation from dental school, Dr. Howenstine practiced in Wisconsin with Midwest Dental in Kimberly before relocating to Stevensville, Michigan in 2012 to purchase and operate his own dental practice.

Since then, his clinical approach has focused on identifying early warning signs of oral health problems and applying treatment strategies that arrest disease progression before extensive repair becomes necessary.

The Science Behind Arrested Dental Disease
Dental research increasingly supports the idea that many oral health conditions can be stabilized when identified early.

Tooth decay, for example, is not always an unstoppable process. In its early stages, enamel demineralization can sometimes be reversed or stabilized through improved oral hygiene, fluoride exposure, dietary changes, and professional dental monitoring.

When those steps are successful, the decay may remain visible but inactive. In clinical terms, the lesion becomes arrested.

The same principle applies to gum disease. Early gum inflammation, also known as gingivitis, can often be arrested through improved oral hygiene practices and routine dental care before it progresses to periodontitis, a more severe condition that damages the bone supporting the teeth.

Dr. Howenstine believes the dental profession should talk more openly about these possibilities.

“Patients often think dentistry is only about fixing things once they break,” he says. “But many dental problems can be arrested long before they require major procedures.”

Communication as a Clinical Tool
One of the key elements of Dr. Howenstine’s practice philosophy is straightforward communication.

He believes patients make better decisions when they clearly understand their oral health status and the steps that can arrest disease progression.

“A lot of dentistry comes down to communication,” he explains. “If patients understand what early decay looks like, or what early gum inflammation means, they can take steps that help keep those problems arrested.”

This approach also emphasizes realistic treatment planning. Instead of rushing toward complex procedures, the goal is often to stabilize the condition first and monitor it over time.

Short visits, consistent monitoring, and patient education can make a significant difference.

“Small interventions done consistently can keep a lot of dental problems arrested,” Dr. Howenstine notes.

A Practical Philosophy for Modern Dentistry
Running a dental practice also requires balancing clinical care with operational discipline. Since purchasing his Stevensville practice in 2012, Dr. Howenstine has applied the same methodical approach to practice management that he applies to dentistry.

Clear documentation, structured workflows, and consistent routines help support both staff and patients.

These systems allow the practice to maintain accurate records, coordinate care effectively, and follow up on conditions that require monitoring to ensure they remain arrested.

“Consistency matters,” he says. “Whether it’s patient care or practice operations, the goal is to identify issues early and keep them from becoming larger problems.”

Beyond the Dental Chair
Dr. Howenstine’s personal interests reflect the same mindset that shapes his professional philosophy. Over the years, he has participated in varsity hockey and soccer, trained for half marathons, crewed on a racing sailboat, and competed in long-distance cross-country ski races.

These activities emphasize preparation, discipline, and endurance.

In many ways, those principles mirror the concept of arresting dental disease.

“Long-distance sports teach you that small habits repeated every day lead to better results,” he says. “The same is true for oral health.”

Regular brushing, flossing, and dental visits may seem simple, but those habits can arrest the early stages of dental disease and prevent much more complex problems later.

Rethinking the Future of Dentistry
As dental technology continues to advance, treatments will undoubtedly become more sophisticated. Yet Dr. Howenstine believes the most meaningful progress in dentistry may come from shifting the focus toward prevention and early intervention.

Rather than waiting for damage to become severe enough to require extensive procedures, dentists and patients can work together to arrest disease before it progresses.

“Dentistry doesn’t always have to be about repairing damage,” he says. “Often the best outcome is when we arrest the problem early and never let it reach that point.”

For patients, that philosophy can translate into fewer complex procedures, lower long-term costs, and healthier smiles that last for decades.

For the dental profession, it may represent a renewed focus on one of the field’s most powerful tools: prevention.

As Dr. Howenstine puts it, “If we can arrest dental disease early, we can change the entire trajectory of oral health.”

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Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Euro Watch 360 journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.