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Posts tagged as “Emergency Case”

A Severe Toothache: An Emergency Case

If you are suffering from a toothache, it is important to know the reason for your discomfort so that you can find the best way to relieve pain, swelling, or other symptoms. Rinsing the mouth with saltwater and placing cold compresses can usually relieve minor pain. Still, more severe toothache may require a quick visit to an emergency dentist to prevent further complications.

Cause Of Toothache

The following factors may cause a toothache:

  • Tooth Decay
  • Tooth abscess
  • Tooth fracture
  • Repetitive movements such as tooth grinding or chewing gum
  • Infected gums

You have to visit your emergency dentist if your symptoms persist for more than a day or two. The emergency dentist can provide some tips on how to relieve toothache and prevent pain in the future. You should also consult with your emergency dentist before taking any medications if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or have any herbal illnesses.

When the patients visit the emergency dentist with these symptoms, the emergency dentist offers different emergency treatments depending on the condition of the person and the tooth, including the following:

  • Remove caries and check the condition of the teeth in the coming days and weeks
  • Emergency root canal treatment (endodontics) and tooth restoration
  • Emergency treatment of the root and placing the crown on it

Visiting The Emergency Dentist

If your toothache is severe or the result of a more serious illness, you should visit the emergency dentist so that you can have it treated properly. Many toothaches require medical attention. An over-the-counter painkiller like ibuprofen can ease your pain until you get to the emergency dentist. You should also visit your emergency dentist if you have any of the following symptoms:

  • Fever
  • Difficulty breathing or swallowing
  • Tooth pain that lasts more than one day or two
  • Swelling
  • Pain while biting
  • Abnormally red gums
  • Unwanted discharge or pus

Things Not To Do To Relieve A Toothache

  • Do not put aspirin on your teeth. If you want to feel better, drink it with water. Putting it on the gums can burn it, which takes 3 to 4 days to heal.
  • Do not use heat to relieve toothache, as it makes it worse.

Emergency Tooth Extraction

Please note that if you have a toothache, you should not take antibiotics that are not prescribed by the emergency dentist. It is worth knowing that the cause of toothache is the invasion and spread of germs to the tooth tissue, where antibiotics cannot penetrate to exert their antimicrobial effect. Therefore, the definitive treatment is to remove the microbial load from the tooth tissue using the appropriate method by the emergency dentist.

What Does The Emergency Root Canal Therapy Mean?

If the infection spreads into the tooth, antibiotics will not be able to cure it, and the germs must be physically removed from the mouth and filled with a suitable substance by the emergency dentist. This process is called emergency root canal therapy or endodontics.