Wyoming Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
About Wyoming Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Oral surgery often involves more than just wisdom teeth—it can include corrective jaw procedures, dental implants, and facial trauma repair. Wyoming Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery handles these specialized cases, offering surgical solutions that general dentists typically don’t. The practice operates out of a professional suite on Arroyo Drive, a quiet stretch in Casper where medical offices blend into the suburban landscape. This isn’t the kind of place you’d stumble upon without intent; most visits start with a referral or a persistent dental issue that demands expertise beyond routine care.
The scope here covers everything from impacted canines to reconstructive work after accidents. Patients might arrive for a consultation on bone grafting before implants or leave with a treatment plan for temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disorders. Unlike cosmetic dentistry, this field deals with the structural—fixing what’s broken, realigning what’s misplaced, or preparing the mouth for long-term prosthetic solutions. Casper’s medical community is small enough that specialists like this become a regional resource, drawing patients from beyond the city limits when complex cases arise.
Finding the office is simple if you’re familiar with Casper’s layout: it sits just off Cy Avenue, near the intersection where Arroyo Drive curves past a mix of commercial and residential buildings. First-time visitors should double-check the suite number—#1—to avoid circling the parking lot. Appointments are essential here, and the staff can be reached directly at (307) 235-1600 for scheduling or preoperative questions. Surgical practices run on tight timelines, so expect clear instructions about preparation and follow-up when you call.
For those mapping the route, the directions place the office in a cluster of low-slung professional buildings, easy to miss if you’re scanning for towering medical centers. It’s the kind of place where the work happens behind closed doors—no flashy signage, just a steady stream of patients who leave with stitches, prescriptions, or a plan for the next phase of recovery. In a town where everyone knows someone who’s had their wisdom teeth out, this is where those stories usually begin.
This listing was last updated on April 18, 2026