That depends on what type of dental work you had. If it was a surgical procedure, or if you were sedated for the procedure, then it would probably be best to wait a day or so before doing a heavy workout. And if you were sedated, or if you were given narcotic pain meds, DO NOT drive for the rest of the day.
After any surgery or mouth work, you should take it easy for a few hours. If you feel fine after that time, you can probably do minimal workouts.
yes but be careful not to damage your tooth
what could have happened is that the root canal was not done properly, or the tooth was so damaged that the root canal did not work. In this event, the tooth may have to be pulled (its what happened to me about a week ago)
I believe they're called Endontics.
They both have roots? Math: Square Root, Dental: Root Canal.
Yes you can exercise after a root canal. It will have no interfierence.
Yes, you can get braces if you have a root canal. And I wouldn't think it would make a difference to an insurance company either. Not sure if your question is about costs. Two major procedures like a root canal and braces would probably exhaust annual maximums of most dental insurances. You would be well advised to get a supplemental plan for major dental work like root canal. addendum: there is usually a lifetime max for orthodontics, separate from root canals etc. ask your insurance company about your coverage. but braces will work on a root canal treated tooth.
The Panama Canal is in Panama, about 1600 miles from the southernmost border of the United States.A root canal is a dental procedure, not a canal.
The medical code for root canal Anterior is D3310.
yes bananas is good for root canal pain
No. By definition, a 'dry socket' is a painful condition that occurs following a tooth extraction, not a root canal. That is not to say that you cannot have pain following a root canal. You can, particularly if the tooth was acutely infected at the time of the root canal, or if the root canal is incomplete. You should consult with the dentist who performed the procedure and follow his/her recommendations.
Im not sure of the question but sounds like the doctor already removed the inerts of the tooth and placed a filling into the root. That is what a root canal therapy is. If you want to remove the root canal filling material and replace it with a more biocompatible material there are dentist that do that.
Root canan usually done by using pain killers. and there will not be any pain by doing that.
No . . . the root canal procedure is intended to save the tooth.