The gum or tissue around a tooth that has been extracted can still be sore for a few days.. remember you had a tooth removed there so that is considered a surgery whether or not it was a simple or surgical extraction it will be sore.. when the tooth is extracted the dentist has to wiggle the tooth around a little to (sort of what you call detach the gum attached to your tooth)! The gum will get inflamed and the surrounding areas make hurt for a few days but this will eventually go away. Aunt Laura
may produce pain that is severe, constant, or throbbing, as well as prolonged sensitivity to heat or cold, swelling and tenderness in the surrounding gums, facial swelling, and discoloration of the tooth.
Because you are having a piece of your body removed, complete with trauma to nerves and blood vessels. ===ANOTHER ANSWER=== A TOOTH THAT is NOT infected causes pain because it is coming out of soft, tender tissue (gums). A tooth that IS infected hurts even more because the tissue is already inflammed and sore. Be sure the dentist puts you on an antibiotic a day or so before extraction, because when pulled, infected tooth can "stir up" the infection and cause it to travel through your blood system, which is not good.
It depends how infected it is. If it is to infected & you don't remove it, it will start to rot.
It herts because the tooth pushing it out and cutting the gum, when it is out it won't hert but don't pull it out it will hert more.
gum disease
Yes but I would check with a dentist
During this type of extraction, an oral surgeon will cut into the gum line to expose the tooth, from which point the extraction is performed much in the same way as a simple tooth extraction.
You must rinse with water and salt. If the pain remains a few weeks after your dental extraction, or if you feel swelling, then you must consult your dentist.
Fear of needles is not a rationale for extracting a tooth. On the other hand, if you refuse to consent to having the tooth or gum treated, extraction may be the only acceptable alternative. That raises the question, will you have the tooth without use of local anesthetic? That will probably hurt a lot more than a needle to numb the tooth and gum.
It simply means that the dentist didn't get all the tooth out - leaving a small piece (or splinter) behind. The splinter usually works its way out of the gum in time.
Most likely due to the Maxilofacial or Parietal nerves, which have been disturbed by the extraction. Don't worry --- it goes away.
cutting through gum tissue to expose the tooth. It may also require removing portions of bone to free the tooth. Some teeth must be cut and removed in sections
Teeth become impacted when they are prevented from growing into their normal position in the mouth by gum tissue, bone, or other teeth
I don't know if its normal but i felt something similar a small fragment of bone in my gum after the extraction but eventually it made its way out and its gone now..
It certainly leaves a big hole in the gum. It will close over in a relatively short time.
That is the gum tissue filling in the space and healing to eventually be like the rest of your gums.