Pacific Northwest Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeons
About Pacific Northwest Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeons
Oral surgery covers more than just wisdom teeth. The field spans corrective jaw procedures, dental implant placements, and treatment of facial trauma—areas where precision intersects with patient care. Specialists in this field often handle complex cases that general dentists refer out, from impacted canines to reconstructive work following injury. It’s a niche where technical skill meets medical oversight, and finding a practice that balances both can simplify what’s often a stressful process.
Burien’s Pacific Northwest Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeons operates out of a suite at 275 SW 160th St Suite #115, a location that’s convenient for those coming from Seattle’s southern neighborhoods or the surrounding King County area. The practice fits into the broader medical landscape of the region, where specialized care is increasingly centralized in suburban hubs rather than downtown cores. This particular stretch of 160th Street is lined with professional offices, making it a functional stop rather than a scenic one—though the proximity to major routes like I-5 and Highway 518 does cut down on travel time.
Procedures here run the gamut from routine extractions to more involved surgeries like bone grafting or TMJ interventions. While oral surgery isn’t the kind of appointment anyone looks forward to, the logistics—parking, accessibility, the ability to coordinate with referring dentists—can at least be straightforward. For those who’ve been referred or are researching options, the practice’s location avoids the congestion of Seattle proper without being so far-flung that follow-ups become a hassle.
Contact details are simple to track down: the office can be reached at (206) 703-2410, and a map confirms the exact spot for first-time visitors. There’s no need to overcomplicate the preliminary steps—whether it’s verifying insurance compatibility or asking about pre-op instructions, the phone line is the direct route. Oral surgery, by nature, isn’t a casual errand, but the administrative side doesn’t have to add unnecessary layers.
This listing was last updated on March 29, 2026