Jobs & Education7 mins ago
Toothache!
15 Answers
Hi everybody!
Help, I have major toothache!!
I was at the dentist on Friday and they replaced a cracked filling in my wisdom tooth....since then I have been in absolute AGONY!!!! My whole mouth is hurting, I've been taking tons of pain killers and putting a hot water bottle on but it's still killing!
Is it just the aftermath of the filling, nerves settling, etc (apparently it was a really deep filling) or should I go back to the dentist?
Thanks in advance
A xXx
Help, I have major toothache!!
I was at the dentist on Friday and they replaced a cracked filling in my wisdom tooth....since then I have been in absolute AGONY!!!! My whole mouth is hurting, I've been taking tons of pain killers and putting a hot water bottle on but it's still killing!
Is it just the aftermath of the filling, nerves settling, etc (apparently it was a really deep filling) or should I go back to the dentist?
Thanks in advance
A xXx
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.hi silver fox. if i were you i wouldnt put a hot water bottle on, this will probably aggravate it even more. An ice pack would be better to reduce swelling.I prob would go back to the dentist, just in case there,s an infection or abcess. I had a tooth removed last week that had been filled at least 4 times, after much pain the dentist decided to remove it, low and behold there was an abcess on the root of my removed tooth. In the meantime the strongest painkiller you can buy over the counter is paramol. Its excellent but does make me drowsy. let us know how you get on!!
It's worth giving the dentist a call just to make sure everything's OK. If it is, and if the paramol doesn't work on the pain, your dentist should be able to prescribe something stronger.
ilovemarkb's right - go for something cool rather than warm. Warmth will draw the blood flow to the surface where all the nerve endings are, thus aggravating them. Something cool will make blood vessels constrict and have the opposite effect.
ilovemarkb's right - go for something cool rather than warm. Warmth will draw the blood flow to the surface where all the nerve endings are, thus aggravating them. Something cool will make blood vessels constrict and have the opposite effect.
Are you taking the Ibruprofen with or after food? As ilovemarkb says, it can upset the stomach but is normally ok when not taken on an empty stomach. If this tooth is in a place where it doesnt show, I would go back and get it taken out.....get the pain over once and for all. If the treatment was that deep anyway, it wont last much longer and you will lose it at some point (speaking from experoence!) Go get it over and done with and you wont have to ever worry about it again!
Good luck! :)
Good luck! :)
I think this is too long to be in pain (and agony is even worse) - go back to the dentist and ask him to take another look. I once had a dentist tell me he couldn't see anything wrong when I was in pain. 4 days later it was so bad I had to go to an emergency dentist who said the first one must have been blind, I needed root canal treatment. This worked. After that I changed dentists. The only purpose of dentists really is to stop your teeth hurting, but they can miss things and make mistakes. Good luck!
I had terrible tootache a few months back. I was in agony and ended up phoning the dentist on a Sunday morning for an emergency appointment. I was prescribed antibiotics and went back the following week to have the tooth removed. I like you tried painkillers as often as I could without overdosing but it didn;t touch the pain. Go back to the dentist!
I am in the same situation, I had to have 3 very deep fillings right next to each other and am also looking for very strong pain killers. Have just bought some paramol (fingers crossed). I wasn't in any pain before the fillings but now the constant dull pain is really annoying, all of my research is suggesting Paramol or Nurofen plus are the best pain killers without prescription (opiate based so dont take them for to long you might get hooked) deep fillings affect the soft tissue at the centre of the tooth near the nerve and it is apparently perfectly normal to experience some horrible pain (sometimes for a number of weeks following multiple deep fillings like this) my dentist has said if the pain persists after another two weeks, he will take some more x rays (just in case) Good Luck, it's absolutely horrible, but you are not alone, and your teeth should be much happier in the future.