Hi Guest!
Here is a link to some additional information on Medicare's website on what dental services are and are not covered by Medicare:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coverage/MedicareDentalCoverage/index.htmlMany dental practices are not enrolled with Medicare Part B in order to bill them for services such as these, which is maybe why you were advised to go to the hospital for these services.
In the information in the link above, it does state that "The extraction of teeth to prepare the jaw for radiation treatment of neoplastic disease" would be covered, but does not specifically mention bariatric surgery. The information also states:
"The following two categories of services are excluded from coverage:
A primary service (regardless of cause or complexity) provided for the care, treatment, removal, or replacement of teeth or structures directly supporting teeth, e.g., preparation of the mouth for dentures, removal of diseased teeth in an infected jaw.
A secondary service that is related to the teeth or structures directly supporting the teeth unless it is incident to and an integral part of a covered primary service that is necessary to treat a non-dental condition (e.g., tumor removal) and it is performed at the same time as the covered primary service and by the same physician/dentist. In those cases in which these requirements are met and the secondary services are covered, Medicare does not make payment for the cost of dental appliances, such as dentures, even though the covered service resulted in the need for the teeth to be replaced, the cost of preparing the mouth for dentures, or the cost of directly repairing teeth or structures directly supporting teeth (e.g., alveolar process)."