North Penn Endodontics: Kim Andrew M DDS
About North Penn Endodontics: Kim Andrew M DDS
Root canals are the kind of procedure most people hope to avoid—but when the need arises, finding a specialist who handles them routinely makes all the difference. North Penn Endodontics: Kim Andrew M DDS focuses exclusively on endodontic care, the branch of dentistry that deals with the inner workings of teeth. This isn’t general dentistry; it’s a practice built around diagnosing tooth pain, performing root canal therapy, and treating dental trauma with the precision that comes from narrow specialization. For those whose dentists refer them out for complex cases, this is where the next step often begins.
The office sits at 127 S 5th St #150 in Quakertown, a block that’s seen its share of foot traffic over the years. Quakertown’s downtown has a way of blending practicality with small-town rhythm, and a specialty dental practice fits right into that mix. Endodontics isn’t the sort of field that draws walk-ins; patients arrive by referral, usually with an x-ray in hand and a question about saving a troubled tooth. The work here revolves around preserving natural teeth—whether that means retreatments for past root canals that didn’t heal, surgical procedures like apicoectomies, or diagnosing the kind of persistent pain that keeps someone up at night.
Booking a consultation starts with a call to (215) 538-2930, where the focus stays on the clinical details: which tooth hurts, how long it’s been bothering you, and what the referring dentist has already ruled out. There’s no small talk about whitening or cleanings; the conversation centers on nerves, infections, and the anatomy of a tooth most people never think about until something goes wrong. That specificity is why patients travel from beyond Quakertown’s limits—because when the problem is this niche, general dentistry often isn’t enough.
First-time visitors might map the route ahead of time, especially if they’re coming from outside the borough. The directions are straightforward once you’re on 5th Street, but dental anxiety has a way of making even simple trips feel complicated. At the very least, the drive gives you time to mentally prepare for the one question everyone asks: *Is this really going to hurt less than the toothache?*
This listing was last updated on May 18, 2026