Jamie Pogue, DMD
About Jamie Pogue, DMD
Endodontics occupies that quiet but essential corner of dental care where precision meets relief. When a tooth’s inner layers—pulp, nerves, the hidden architecture—demand attention, the work happens behind the scenes of routine cleanings and fillings. Root canals, often the most feared phrase in dentistry, become a necessary reset rather than a last resort. The field thrives on patience: treating infections that lurk beneath enamel, diagnosing pain with origins deeper than a cavity, and preserving teeth that might otherwise be lost. It’s the kind of specialty that doesn’t advertise with flashy signs but instead relies on referrals from general dentists and the cautious optimism of patients who’ve been told, *“There’s still a way to save it.”*
In Taylorsville, this kind of care unfolds at Jamie Pogue, DMD, where the office sits along South Redwood Road, just north of 6200 South in a suite that shares its building with other healthcare practitioners. The location places it within easy reach of both the suburban sprawl to the west and the denser commercial strips nearer to the freeway. Endodontics, by nature, isn’t about walk-ins or impulse visits—it’s where people arrive after a persistent ache or a dentist’s recommendation, often with a mix of resignation and hope. The work here centers on microscopic detail: cleaning canals, sealing roots, and sometimes, retrying treatments that didn’t fully resolve the first time. There’s no glamour in it, just the steady rhythm of solving problems most patients never see coming.
The practice’s presence in this part of the Salt Lake Valley reflects how specialty care tends to cluster—close enough to major roads for accessibility but removed from the noise of retail corridors. Taylorsville itself straddles that line between residential quiet and the hum of nearby industry, a place where strip malls coexist with tree-lined streets. An endodontist’s office fits the landscape: unassuming from the outside, but inside, a space where the focus narrows to a single tooth, a single nerve, a single chance to avoid extraction. Directions are simple—just follow the map to Suite 203—and the building’s layout means you’re likely to pass a pharmacy or a lab on the way in, a reminder of how interconnected these kinds of services really are.
For anyone facing the prospect of a root canal or a stubborn dental infection, the first step is often just a conversation. Questions about sedation options, recovery timelines, or whether a tooth can truly be saved tend to unfold over the phone, where the details feel less abstract. Jamie Pogue, DMD keeps that line open at (801) 266-7393, a number that, like the practice itself, serves as a bridge between the discomfort of *now* and the possibility of moving past it. The neighborhood around Redwood Road doesn’t slow down much—traffic hums, businesses turnover—but in these small, specialized offices, the work is about pausing long enough to fix what’s been overlooked.
This listing was last updated on March 30, 2026