If you have
a toothache or discomfort in your mouth or jaw, it is important
to have a complete oral exam to determine
the cause. The chart below may help you describe the
pain and symptoms to us. This will in turn help us determine
the
cause and best solution for the problem.
Symptom
|
Possible Causes
|
Possible Solutions
|
Sharp pain when you bite down |
Tooth decay or a loose filling |
A new restoration to restore the tooth |
An infection inside the inner pulp layer of your tooth |
You may need root canal therapy to remove the infected
tissue |
A cracked tooth |
Cracked teeth can often be saved by placing a crown
to protect and strengthen |
Severe pain, pressure, or swelling in your mouth that
does not go away |
An abscess of a tooth root, in the gum tissue, or in
the jaw bone |
Call us for an emergency appointment and take over-the-counter
pain meds until we see you. Root canal, extraction, gum
treatment or other therapies may be needed. |
A dull ache in upper teeth and jaw |
A sinus headache or a sinus infection (upper back teeth
are very close to the sinus |
Your physician can treat if pain is from sinus. Antibiotics
and over-the-counter sinus meds can reduce sinus pain. |
Grinding or clenching your teeth (called bruxism) -
can cause a dull ache in the upper jaw along with sensitive
teeth and sore muscles |
A night guard, bite adjustment, muscle relaxants or
other therapies may be needed. |
An abscess of a tooth root, in the gum tissue or bone. |
Root canal therapy, gum cleaning or other therapy |
Pain in your head, neck, or ear that does not go away |
Damaged or infected nerve tissue in your teeth |
Root canal therapy may be necessary to remove the infected
tissue |
Problems in your jaw joints or spasm of the muscles
that move your jaw |
Possible solutions could be a night guard or full time
orthotic, muscle relaxants and anti-inflammatory medication |
Sensitivity to heat, cold, or sweets |
Dental treatment
(temporary tooth sensitivity is normal after any dental treatment as it can disturb
the nerves within the tooth) |
Will usually subside within several days. Over-the-counter
meds are often helpful. Sometimes bite adjustment is
needed. |
Tooth bleaching
(Some tooth sensitivity is normal after tooth bleaching) |
Pain should subside after several days. Sensitive-teeth
toothpaste or fluoride also is helpful. |
Gum recession |
Tooth-colored filling to cover area, sensitive-teeth
toothpaste or fluoride |
Loose or cracked filling |
Replace with new restoration |
Cracked tooth |
Can often be saved with an onlay or crown to protect
tooth |
Lingering pain after eating something hot or cold |
Deep decay or a fractured tooth |
You may need a crown and or a root canal to save your
tooth |
As always, if you are concerned about pain in your teeth
or mouth, do not hesitate to contact us. After we diagnose
the cause we will make recommendations for treatment. Keep
in mind we will make that treatment as comfortable as possible,
probably much more so than the pain you are feeling now.
It certainly will help keep your mouth healthy in the long
run.