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Questions in the Dental Health forum are answered by Dr. Jerome Tsang and Dr. Jerome Bogin. Topics covered include bridges, cavities, crowns, and x-rays.
I wish I could give a cause but not seeing you or the x-ray it is impossible to diagnosis the problem. I think you are following the right path and I am sure the pros will find the solution.
Well, I certainly didn't expect you to "diagnose" me, but I thought maybe I could get some feedback as far as possibilities. I suppose this matter is much more complicated and maybe someone with more experience could come up with some information that could help me.
The lower right jaw in area of teeth had high sensitivity to cold liquids, but minimal with hot.
I noticed the pain about a week after part of a silver filling fell out and I couldn't get an appt. for 3 weeks to have the filling replaced (with white composite). However, the dentist saw nothing regarding that tooth, or adjacent teeth. This was the tooth in front of the 1st molar.
The dentist I saw for second opinion did cold testing and the first molar was one that I noticed a lot of sensitivity. (This tooth is a very deep filling that was restored late last year, with white composite. Dentist said there was decay under that silver filling and before she replaced it with the composite, I noticed she kept drilling and drilling and it seemed to take a while until we were ready to put the band around it to fill it in.) The second dentist said that maybe the wisdom tooth extraction would ease pain, but if not, we will have to explore the teeth, that one in particular, since it has very deep restorations.
I was also given a mouth guard for possible bruxism, which I eschewed, and rightly so. It did not help the pain at all.
One other question---If the deeply restored tooth is in fact, causing the pain, do dentists do root canals on molars? I thought I heard my old dentist say that he doesn't do RC therapy on molars. I would hate to lose this tooth.
-K