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alienshadow Male, 34 years kenly - NC Member since Sep 2007
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First thing I think you need to do is insist the dentist determines which tooth is actually the real problem. Good luck and let me know how you get on.
About the chewing, I was avoiding it at first, but when I went back to the dentist two days after complaining about the pain, he said "It doesn't hurt to chew on it, does it?" So I said I had been avoiding chewing there, but I decided to try it after he made that comment. Right now, it still has the medicine in the tooth with a temporary filling. I will go back for the permanent filling in a few weeks and the crown after that. When he did the procedure, he said the nerve was definitely dying and part of the nerve had no blood supply. I am concerned that maybe the infection was so bad it could have spread. This is getting to be too much for me to handle. I need to get this problem solved so I can actually get work done while I'm at work and not be a zombie all the time.
So 6 weeks ago off to the endodontist I went. Yay for me. After the first 3 weeks of his first stage of treatment, I was in so much pain that I was ready to have my husband rip the tooth out with some of his tools. And then WHAM, at the third week mark, I suddenly realized I had gone through a whole day without needing to take any painkillers. You just have to hang on for that day and I know it's the easiest thing to say, but when you're the one in pain it's SO hard. It gets to you emotionally and all you feel like doing is crying (unless you're a man of course). People would say to me to be patient and I'd feel like smacking them in the head! BUT, the tooth did settle down. It's been six weeks now and it's still settling down, still has the odd aching sensation which comes and goes but nothing that I need to take a painkiller for. The endo doesn't want to complete the final stage of treatment until 3 months has passed. I'm saying all this because sometimes it's just a time factor and if the pain is too great to wait it out, then the only other option is extraction. You could get a second opinion too if you were not satisfied with your regular dentist. They're only human after all.
Regarding your worry about the infection having spread, if your dentist is a good one then he would have cleaned all the diseased pulp out of the tooth and medicated it enough to destroy any bad bacteria. The medication has to have time to work its magic and heal the tooth from the inside. I'm no expert but after having had four root canals, it sounds like your tooth has to settle after the first stage. And for me it's always been the molars that have caused the most pain and distress. Sometimes they have to widen the canals with the drill to fill the canals with the gutta percha material. This can contribute to a heap of pain afterwards because all the nerves around that area have to get over the beating they've taken. Not sure if this was the case with your tooth or not.
I do sympathize with you. If I was you I wouldn't even try to chew on that tooth for a little while, just so it can have a rest from having the amount of pressure put on it that chewing causes. Did the dentist also check your bite and the occlusion between the tooth and the teeth above it when the temporary filling was put on? I know that this can also cause pain if it hasn't been done properly, and the teeth above it keep hitting it if the filling is even slightly too high.
I really hope you start feeling better soon. Please keep me updated if you want to....I'd like to know how you get on.