I understand your concern, especially since you are quite young and have been told about bone loss. Based on the X-ray provided, the bone levels do not appear severely compromised, and there are no immediate signs suggesting risk of tooth loss or severe mobility at present.
In young patients, what is often described as “bone loss” on X-rays may actually be mild bone remodeling related to tooth alignment, crowding, or angulation, rather than active gum disease—especially when oral hygiene is good, as you have mentioned.
Regarding Invisalign or orthodontic treatment:
Orthodontic correction can sometimes be helpful to redistribute biting forces and improve long-term gum and bone health, but it is not an emergency treatment and not always mandatory solely based on mild bone changes seen on an X-ray. A clinical examination is essential before deciding this.
Next Steps
At this stage:
There is no need to panic about tooth loss
Your condition does not appear severe
A clinical gum evaluation by a dentist or periodontist will help confirm whether the bone levels are stable
Treatment decisions like Invisalign should be taken only after correlating X-ray findings with clinical examination
Health Tips
Continue brushing twice daily and flossing regularly, as you are already doing
Consider professional scaling and polishing if not done recently
Avoid habits like clenching, grinding, or nail biting, which can worsen bone stress
Do not start orthodontic treatment without a proper periodontal evaluation, as gums and bone must be healthy before moving teeth
With good oral hygiene, monitoring, and timely professional care, the overall prognosis is good.