To promote faster healing of your gums after tooth extraction, maintain good oral hygiene by gently brushing your teeth and rinsing with a saltwater solution. Staying hydrated and following a soft diet can also aid in recovery. Additionally, avoiding tobacco and alcohol, as well as following your dentist's post-operative care instructions, will support the healing process. If you experience any unusual symptoms, consult your dentist promptly.
This is gross, just warning you. But yes your gums can be swollen and red (because the nerves keeping the teeth intact to the gums have been pulled).
no
Your child should be shedding her baby teeth by now. If her baby teeth had been pulled(you can do this at home)her tooth would not be coming out of her gums. As far as the Dentists in Wisconsin not seeing her, Does she have behavioral problems in the chair?
gums will only "pull away" from teeth if bacteria is present between the gingiva (gum) and tooth surface, or you are brushing too hard! If you havent been brushing at least twice a day and flossing once a day, you should start before your teeth fall out!
Gargle with salt water and take a multivitamin daily.
Well, before they actually remove your teeth, the dentist will inject a numbing formula into the gums out the teeth that are to be pulled out. Pretty much that thing that hurts the most is the little prick of the needle. Don't sweat it!
Have it pulled out.
The dentist may have done a lowzy job on that specific tooth when extracting
The gums are the pink skin that the teeth are connected to.
no they are not the same because the jaw is like your gums and your teeth hang from you gums
Usually when teeth are growing on the palate instead of where the baby teeth were, they need to be extracted(pulled). Sometimes if it isn't very severe, an orthdontist can fix the problem with braces.
Gums are the pink tissue that surround the teeth and covers the alveolar. The function of the gums is to protect the teeth and support the mouth's structure.