If you see your dentist right away no. I know dry sockets are extremely painful and I had 4 when I had my wisdom teeth out. The dentist took out the stitches and packed something that smelled like cloves inside and stitched the gum again. All I can say it was a delightful relief from the terrible pain I suffered. He explained that sometimes when the tooth is pulled the thin membrane that protects the bone underneath comes off and air gets at it. Please see your dentist right away. For some patients taking bisphosphonates (Fosamax, etc.) drugs used to fight the effects of osteoporosis, there is an added risk associated with having a tooth extracted. A small percentage of these patients may experience a serious complication called osteonecrosis, wherein the bone of the jaw, rather than simply healing following the extraction, the bone begins to die. This requires the attention of a trained specialist, such as an oral surgeon. http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/182_08_180405/car10429_fm.html
Yes! I have dry socket from a surgical molar extraction. 6 days after I woke up at 6 am vomiting profusely with a horrible headache all over. After 3 hours of it steadily getting worse I called my oral surgeon who brought me right in. I definitely had dry socket without an infection (already on antibiotics to prevent it) and was chilled and sweating profusely. They gave me IV fluids, pain and nausea meds. They also flushed it with an antibiotic flush and sent me home with orders to continuously flush 5x a day. I can not remember the last time I have felt that awful but the truly rough part didn't last too terribly long.
Yes, it certainly could. If it's a top tooth, the nerve could shoot pain all over the place. You need to have it seen if this is the problem, cos it can go really nasty. (I had this many years ago). The bad taste is normal too... get back to the dentist ASAP.
Yes. It will need to be treated with medicated gauze. Dry socket means your gum has not clotted properly and if there is no clot to act as protective barrier it will very likely become infected.
NO.
It is quite possible that it may be the result of a blood clot in the head.
A blow to the head would cause swelling.
a hit to the head would cause this
Your temple is your head. Your head is the place where you brain is. Your brain is what controls your body.
The "socket" for the femoral head is called the acetabulum.
No, what you on about mate
There are a number of things that could cause your twitch on the right side of your head. It could be a nervous twitch for example.
Temple arteriolitis is damage to the blood vessels to the head. The exact cause is unknown but some doctors believe it may be partially caused by a faulty immune response.
The socket is known as the hosel, it is where the head is connected to the shaft.
temple
Your temple.
The socket is called the acetabulum.acetabulum