You take it to a dentist.
You can only put a bridge on if there is a tooth on each side to support it. Therefore, a bridge cannot replace a wisdom tooth, because it's the last one on the dental arch. If you keep your wisdom tooth and you need to extract the molar right before, then you can replace that molar with a bridge. In any other case, an implant would be a better treatment. Thornhill Dentist http://www.bcdentalcare.ca/CosmeticDentistry/tabid/471/Default.aspx
Swelling from a molar tooth being pulled is normal. Take the medication that was prescribed to you and do not chew on that side of your mouth until it is healed.
If a patient has not formed a permanent mandibular first bicuspid on the left side, the retained tooth in its place is typically the primary (deciduous) mandibular first molar. This can occur if the permanent tooth fails to develop due to various reasons such as agenesis or developmental anomalies. The retained primary molar may remain in the arch longer than usual, potentially leading to alignment issues or other dental complications.
A grass seed abscess or a cheesy gland abscess.
Absolutely not - Topamax or topiramate are anti-convulsants. It is a medication used to treat epilepsy seizures and migrane. You cannot just take a dose of this it can have very serious side effects!
Depends on the size of the hole and which tooth. If it is an upper molar, the roots could be within the sinus cavity. And when there is sinus pressure present, it could cause headaches on the same side. Also, if the hole on the tooth is large enough, air, hot and cold stimuli and food could set the nerve off, triggering a headache. You should see your dentist for futher x-rays and examination.
abscess, disseminated intravascular coagulation, dysphonia.
It is probably from a bad tooth. Or it could be an abscess, especially if your cat goes outside and got bit or in a fight with another cat (or wild animal). Most likely is from an infected tooth though, you should take him to a Veterinarian to be checked out, because whatever the cause, he is probably in discomfort.
Depending on the circumstances for the wisdom teeth (reason for removal, location of the teeth prior to extraction, age of the patient when removed) could mean different things for the concern you are having. Recent extraction could sometimes have "bone spurs" working their way out almost causing a sliver in your finger effect. If the wisdom tooth was impacted and deteriated the bone behind the second molar, the bone "defect" could be present causing an area to possibly abscess around the back side or distal of the second molar. Sometimes the most logical explanation is that a popcorn hull or something foreign gets in the gum tissue behind the second molar causing an inflammatory response in the tissue. Recommend keeping the area clean, if a problem persists and it get more painful, see your dentist for a x-ray and evaluation.
If you had a lower molar or wisdom tooth removed you can experience radiating pain to the ear on that particular side. If the pain is severe it can signal the beginning of an infection or what is referred to as a dry socket. You should go see your dentist or oral surgeon.
If it's a wisdom tooth it needs to be removed. But it could be another molar; it's easy to confuse them. If it's another molar, it needs to be looked at to see if it can be saved and how. Either way, you need to see a dentist.
Canine tooth