

Interpreting Tooth Pain
Symptom #1: Momentary hot or cold sensitivity
to foods or drinks.
Possible Problem: May not be a problem. You
may have experienced some minimal gum recession exposing sensitive
portions of your teeth. Or you may be clenching your teeth while
you sleep and the following day the teeth are more sensitive.
There
could also be a hormonal component to the sensitivity.
What to do: Try using toothpaste made for
sensitive teeth. Brush and floss carefully and completely.
If this doesn't help, call us to check with an x-ray and other
pulp testing procedures.
Symptom #2: Sensitivity to hot or cold foods after dental treatment.
Possible Problem: Dental work may cause temporary nerve sensitivity.
What to do: Wait 5 to 7 days. If the pain persists or worsens,
call us to evaluate any nerve (pulp) damage
Symptom #3: Lingering (20-60 minutes) pain after eating hot
or cold foods.
Possible Problem: This usually means the pulp has been damaged
somehow.
What to do: Root canal treatment will likely have to be performed.
Spontaneous pain - especially if it wakes you up at night - can
become an obvious symptom of nerve damage.
Symptom #4: Sharp pain when biting down.
Possible Problem: Biting pain alone may indicate a cracked tooth.
A crown is usually needed and often he nerve has been involved.
If this biting pain is accompanied by cold sensitivity, an
emergency root canal problem has developed.
What to do: Call us for an immediate evaluation and/or root canal
treatment. Take an over-the-counter analgesic to stop the pain.
Airplane flights or dramatic altitude changes can worsen your
symptoms
Symptom #5: Constant and severe pain with pressure, swelling
of gums, and sensitivity to touch.
Possible Problem: Your pulp is completely abscessed, causing
the teeth and surrounding bone to become infected.
What to do: Call us immediately to save the tooth with root canal
treatment. Even strong pain medication does not help at this
stage.
Symptom #6: Any pain, gum boil, or swelling that happens in a
tooth that has previously had an old root canal.
Possible Problem: Tooth may be re-abscessing due to an undiscovered
root canal or inadequate seal of the canals or a fracture of
the tooth.
What to do: See us for preventative antibiotics so the problem
doesn't worsen. Most likely the old root canal will have to be
re-done. Or surgical correction may be necessary. If the root
is fractured then tooth will be lost.




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