Sometimes parts of the extracted tooth break away during the process of removal. Fragments of bone can also break away and then work their way out of the gums.
if you have another tooth pushing it out , and it the tooth is comming from a different spot. It might be a surnumerary tooth - an extra wisdom tooth. But this should have been seen on a panoramic x-ray if it was taken in your late teens. It also might be a peace of root that was left out from the extraction of the wisdom tooth that was there.
I am 20 years old,i have placed braces on the upper mandible.My lower left wisdom tooth was removed in the beginning of the treatment because it grew to the seventh tooth.What should i do?To Pull out left side wisdom tooth before placing the lower mandible braces,or to put the braces and after the treatment to pull it out (daemon system self-ligating)
i had a wisdom tooth removed on the left side of my lower jaw on wednesday. my sutures are white. hope this helps. oh and they hurt like hell!
When a wisdom tooth is extracted...or any tooth for that matter, a cavity is left in the bone in the space which was occupied by the tooth. Amoxicillin is an antibiotic commonly prescribed following surgical procedures including wisdom tooth removal. It aids in the healing process by preventing infection by bacterial at the surgical site. The cavity will be filled by bone as a natural healing process..it happens over a long period of time...months
More that likely it was a small left over peice or fragment if you will left from the tooth.
A root canal would almost never be done on a Wisdom Tooth. But it is when they open the top of the tooth and remove all of the nerves in the roots. They leave the roots and fill them with a special material. Then they put a filling in the tooth. The tooth will also need a crown put on it to keep it healthy. Having your Wisdom Teeth removed is when they take out the very last molars in your mouth. They are called Wisdom Teeth. Very few people have room for these teeth to fit properly in their mouth. Each person has one on the top right, top left, bottom right and bottom left; four wisdom teeth. A root canal is done to save a tooth and keep it in mouth. The removal of a tooth consists of extracting it. Which is better? Depends on many factors. Can you use your wisdom tooth if you keep it? Will that wisdom tooth replace another molar that has previously extracted? The best would be to discuss it with your dentist.
It could very well be a wisdom tooth trying to cut. When a wisdom tooth begins to cut, it can move several teeth in the process and cause some jaw pain. The ear pain could be drainage if a wisdom tooth is cutting. A few painkillers are your best bet to help the pain, or you could opt to have the wisdom teeth removed surgically. It could also be a sinus infection or infection in a root tooth. A dentist's x-ray is the best plan.
It certainly leaves a big hole in the gum. It will close over in a relatively short time.
I have had some tooth remains after extraction all I did was called the dentist told them about it and when I went back they removed it, It should not cost nothing. the reason some bone is left is the tooth could have broken and they did not see the bone left behind
It is not impossible if the tooth has erupted into the mouth, but it is important to determine if filling a wisdom tooth is the best course of action. Often, removing a wisdom tooth is preferable to filling because the tooth may not be in a functional relationship (ie., it does not bite against another tooth). Also, wisdom teeth are often very difficult to keep clean, and the likelihood of decay re-occurring is quite high. It is generally a matter of weighing the benefits against the risks associated with the proposed treatment. As wisdom teeth are generally not critical to maintain a healthy mouth, removal is usually the preferred treatment. A competent oral surgeon or dentist should be consulted before making the decision of how to treat a wisdom tooth.
Starting on the upper right back (wisdom tooth) that is number one, then tooth in front is number two, and going all the way around, the last molar in the back left is number 16, then drop down to bottom left in very back, (wisdom tooth) is 17, then come around to front, then very back right side (wisdom tooth) is 32. The upper right central would be tooth number 8,then just next to it 9. (Your two front teeth) hope this helps I was an RDA and one of the worlds smartest Endodontist/periodontists' assistant in the 70s and 80's. Dr. SANFORD S. GOLDEN DDS He was a teaching professor at CASE WESTERN RESERVE in the late fifties. He invented the contour chair and sold it's patent to the RITTER COMPANY in the fifties. I miss him. : o (
GENERALLY, once wisdom teeth are gone they don't grow in again. If something is coming out from your gums after a wisdom tooth extraction, it might be a piece of root that was left out. It might also be a surnumerary wisdom tooth (extra wisdom tooth) that was already there before the extraction. However, they can grow back. It's documented, and happens to 1-3% of adults.Teeth don't grow back. Basically you get two sets, first the baby/milk teeth, then your permanent teeth. Wisdom teeth are the last of your permanent teeth to emerge.If you lose a milk tooth it will kinda-sorta be replaced with a permanent tooth (which you would have gotten eventually anyhow).When a permanent tooth is lost it's gone, your body won't make a new one.Back teeth are also known as molars. If you lose one of those before you have gotten your wisdom teeth, then it can look like it's the lost one that's grown back, but it isn't. It's the wisdom tooth (which you would have gotten eventually anyway) that has stepped up in its place.No. they dont grow back once they are removed. however, rarely we do find an extra molar, other than the wisdom teeth, which are called as the PARA Molars.Teeth don't grow back. Basically you get two sets, first the baby/milk teeth, then your permanent teeth. Wisdom teeth are the last of your permanent teeth to emerge. When a permanent tooth is lost it's gone, your body won't make a new one.