Food stuck in a wisdom tooth hole can lead to infection if not properly cleaned, as it creates an environment for bacteria to thrive. Symptoms may include pain, swelling, bad breath, and a foul taste in the mouth. It's important to maintain good oral hygiene and consult a dentist for proper treatment, which may include cleaning the area, antibiotics, or further dental intervention. Regular check-ups can help prevent complications associated with wisdom teeth extraction sites.
Food stuck in a wisdom tooth cavity can lead to discomfort, bad breath, and potential infection if not addressed. It's important to carefully clean the area with a toothbrush or dental floss to remove any trapped debris. Rinsing with warm salt water can also help alleviate irritation and promote healing. If the problem persists, consulting a dentist is advisable for professional cleaning and evaluation.
You can try to flick it out with your tongue but if that hurts, fill a glass with warm water and add a teaspoon of salt, stir water then rinse your mouth with it. (Try not to swallow the water.)
No, a wisdom tooth cannot serve as a replacement for a molar. Wisdom teeth are located at the back of the mouth and are not typically used for chewing food like molars. Additionally, wisdom teeth often need to be removed due to issues such as impaction or crowding.
Food can sometimes get trapped in wisdom teeth stitches, which can lead to discomfort and potential infection. It's important to maintain good oral hygiene by gently rinsing your mouth with warm salt water to help dislodge any debris. If the area feels painful or the food remains stuck, consult your dentist for advice or possible removal of the stitches. Regular follow-up care is crucial to ensure proper healing.
The cheek swelling was caused by bacterial infection, which food debris to the periodontal pocket of your wisdom tooth resulted in. Usually metronidazole and cefaclor should be taken orally about one week. The wisdom tooth need to be pulled out until the cheek swelling cure.
Well food ends up touching the tooth. The tooth brand knew and not as strong as your other teeth. Also it might be from the tooth growing and breaking tissue in your gums.
Quite often, a piece of gum tissue overlies the wisdom tooth which is partially through. Keep the area as clean as possible, otherwise attend your dental checkups as recommended so your dentist can keep it under observation. If the loose gum is causing you pain or severe irritation, then the wisdom tooth may need to come out, but it sounds unlikely from what you describe. There is no need to have wisdom teeth removed, unless they are causing problems such as pain, swelling, infection, decay in the tooth in front etc. Very often, the risks of wisdom tooth removal outweigh the benefits. Sometimes a wisdom tooth does not erupt completely, and creates an extension of gum called operculum. While eating and chewing on food, this operculum can be irritated and infected causing a pericoronitis. This condition has signs of intense pain, redness, a bad smell and a difficulty of opening the mouth. If the operculum does not go away, it is advised to extract the wisdom tooth to prevent complications of the pericoronitis. Under certain conditions, if the wisdom tooth has erupted, but an operculum is still present, it is possible to make an operculectomy, which is the removal of the extension of the gum itself without extracting the tooth.
They need to be extracted, your jawline does not have enough room for your wisdom teeth and therefore behind your wisdom teeth, food is getting trapped and pus is oozing. Go to the dentist soon.
If you get food into a tooth extraction hole, it can cause pain, infection, and decrease the healing time. Your doctor should have given you a syringe that you can use to squirt water into the hole to get any food out.
I had all my wisdom teeth until I was 32. About a month ago I got a real bad jaw ache on my right side and my teeth got really sensitive. I used ice packs and pain meds for aboout 2 days and made an appt with the oral surgeon, I finally could not take the pain anymore. He told me that the impacted wisdom tooth will form a gap between itself and the 2nd molar which allows food and bacteria to grow and become infected...by the time you begin to feel the pain, the infection is already manifested and needs to be treated with an antibiotic. You'll know , trust me I had been having pain in my lower left wisdom tooth for 2 days....On the third day the pain got so bad that I just could not take it anymore..I went to the dentist and found out that I had gotten an infection in it....With the pain you will know
A wisdom tooth may become impacted due to lack of space in the dental arch and its eruption is therefore prevented by gum, bone, another tooth or all three. Lack of space occurs because our jaws have become smaller (through evolution), we do not loose teeth through decay as frequently as in the past, and our diet is such that our teeth do not wear down as much. This impaction may cause saliva, bacteria and food particles to collect around an impacted wisdom tooth, causing it, or the next tooth to decay. It is very difficult to remove such decay. Pain and infection will usually insue. Also a asymptomatic wisdom tooth may over time slowly impinge on a branch of the facial nerve potentially causing progressive facial paralisis.
Yes it can. Not flossing will leave food in between your teeth. That food will grow bacteria. That bacteria will eat away at your teeth and the roots will get infected. the infection, unless the tooth is removed or the infection is treated, will spread to your heart.