Ordinarily, the tooth’s nerve is well protected in the inner pulp. However, sometimes it gets exposed. Gum disease is the most common cause of exposed nerves. Still, any activity that causes gum degeneration, such as vigorous tooth brushing, smoking, tobacco usage, teeth grinding, and teeth misalignment, can have similar effects.
When any of these happen, it’s never a funny story. The first problem you encounter is how best to eat and drink because hot or cold, sugary, acidic, or sour foods and drinks irritate an exposed tooth nerve. You may get lucky when you take food or drink like this because tooth nerve pain may sometimes be dull and aching. On the other hand, it may also come as a sharp, stabbing one. Sometimes, you could get pain relievers and feel relaxed a bit. However, it doesn’t work for everyone. That is why we advise that you visit a dentist anytime you feel like this.
At Golnick pediatric dentistry, we offer several management options depending on the cause of nerve tooth pain. Kindly read on to see what these are.
The two major causes of tooth nerve pain are Pulpal Sensitivity and Dental Sensitivity.
Various signs indicate that you have nerve pain. These symptoms could start as mild ones and deteriorate over time. Tooth nerve pain symptoms include:
Some ways to prevent tooth nerve pain are practicing good dental hygiene and regular dental examination.
Dentists use the nerve block procedure to numb an area of the mouth, usually before a painful dental procedure. Asides from this, there are several other options available in sedation dentistry to help patients through uncomfortable dental procedures. However, dentists don’t use nerve block surgery to treat tooth nerve pain. They use other techniques- dental fillings and root canals, depending on the cause of the pain.
Dental fillings can solve the problem if tooth nerve pain is due to cracks in the tooth. A root canal treatment is more suitable for severe tooth decay or damage. A dentist removes the injured nerve and pulp from inside the tooth, cleans the region, and closes it during a root canal. The nerves inside teeth aren’t necessary for good tooth function and are even causing pain. Hence, removal solves the problem.