DentalNPI
Top 5 · UT

Top Oral & Maxillofacial Pathologists in Utah

Diagnoses oral diseases from biopsy and imaging. Curated top-5 from the dental sub-specialty taxonomy and CMS quality signals — Medicare enrollment, MIPS score, and HPSA service all weighed in.

In top list
5
Medicare-enrolled
3
HPSA shortage
0

Indexed density: 0.14 per 100K residents (population 3.50M ).

Verified · NPPES (CMS)refreshed May 7, 2026
  1. Kyle S Christensen, D.D.S.

    Oral & Maxillofacial Pathologist

    South Jordan, UT
    MedicareView profile
  2. Carter Timothy Bruett, DDS

    Oral & Maxillofacial Pathologist

    Salt Lake City, UT
    MedicareClass of 2021View profile
  3. Crayton Ross Walker, D.D.S., M.D.

    Oral & Maxillofacial Pathologist

    Salt Lake City, UT
    MedicareView profile
  4. F. Zane Jessen, DDS

    Oral & Maxillofacial Pathologist

    Ogden, UT
    View profile
  5. Gary Lynn Ellis, DDS

    Oral & Maxillofacial Pathologist

    Salt Lake City, UT
    View profile

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Frequently asked

Oral & Maxillofacial Pathologists in Utah: questions

  • How are these oral & maxillofacial pathologists in Utah ranked?
    The ranking weights NPPES record completeness, CMS Medicare enrollment, MIPS quality scores when available, and HRSA HPSA service. Of the 5 listed, 3 are Medicare-enrolled and 0 practice in a dental shortage area. We do not accept payment for placement.
  • Do oral & maxillofacial pathologists in Utah accept Medicaid?
    Utah's Medicaid program is Utah Medicaid. Specialist participation varies. We surface Medicare enrollment as a public-program proxy on each profile, but the only authoritative answer comes from the office and the Utah Medicaid provider directory (https://medicaid.utah.gov/).
  • How do I check a oral & maxillofacial pathologist's license in Utah?
    Use the Utah Dentist & Dental Hygienist Licensing Board license-lookup at https://dopl.utah.gov/dentist-dental-hygienist/. Confirm the license is active and check for any disciplinary actions.
  • When should I see a oral & maxillofacial pathologist instead of a general dentist?
    You don't — patients don't see pathologists directly; Your dentist or oral surgeon may send a biopsy to one if they find a suspicious lesion.