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Emergency Dental Care

Dental emergencies are an unfortunate part of life. You’re eating something crunchy and suddenly a tooth cracks, or you wake up in the morning with swelling and pain in your jaw

Many people head straight to the emergency room when they have tooth pain. The truth is that this is inefficient and usually not very helpful.

Most emergency rooms aren’t set up to handle dental emergencies. They might be able to give you some antibiotics if your emergency is caused by an infection, but they will still advise you to see your dentist as soon as possible. For this small service, you are likely to be hit with a huge co-pay or bill.

Call our office instead.

We’ll get you in quickly, relieve your pain, and come up with a treatment plan for your problem. This saves you both money and time, not to mention days of dental pain. Of course, if you are experiencing a life-threatening emergency, please go to your local emergency room.

Common Dental Emergencies

What are the most common reasons that people need emergency dental care?

Sudden Tooth Pain – Significant tooth pain with no apparent cause results in many an emergency dental visit. Tooth pain should never be ignored. Many serious conditions can cause tooth pain including:

  • Cavities that have penetrated deep into the tooth
  • Advanced gum disease
  • An abscessed tooth
  • Exposed tooth roots
  • An impacted tooth

These conditions should be treated promptly to prevent further damage to the tooth or spreading of the infection.

Chipped or Fractured Teeth – Chipped or broken teeth can be caused by sudden trauma to the mouth or by simply biting down on a hard object. Sometimes this happens because you had a cavity and didn’t know it, and the internal structure has been weakened. If possible, keep the chip or piece that broke off of the tooth and bring it with you to your appointment.

Lost Teeth – Whether your tooth was knocked out due to an injury or you lost a tooth for no apparent reason, losing a tooth is a dental emergency. In some cases, we can replace the tooth if we can get to it fast enough, but sometimes a lost tooth will have to be replaced with a dental implant or a bridge.

Our chances of saving the tooth are best if you retrieve the tooth and quickly rinse it with cool water, avoiding the root area. Try to replace the tooth back in the socket, but don’t force it. If the tooth can’t be replaced in the socket, keep it in a glass of milk. Call our office immediately.

Other Dental Emergencies

Some of the other reasons we would need to see you quickly include:

  • A tooth has become dislodged (but not fully knocked out).
  • An object is stuck between your teeth that can’t be removed with brushing or dental floss.
  • A filling or crown has fallen out.
  • You are experiencing a dental abscess.
  • You have injured your gums or palate.

Call our office for an appointment for any dental emergency.

Frequently Asked Questions

The goal of an emergency dental appointment is to address the immediate need, resolve your problem, and relieve your pain. If we believe further care is needed, we will schedule you a regular appointment to follow up and set up an appropriate treatment plan to prevent future problems.

Meet Our Doctor:

Joshua Grooms DDS

Dr. Joshua Grooms was born and raised in southern Ohio. He attended Marshall University in Huntington, WV and graduated with a Bachelors in Biology in 2006. Dr. Grooms then attended West Virginia University School of Dentistry and obtained his Doctorate of Dental Surgery (D.D.S) in 2011.

Following graduation, Dr. Grooms moved to Northeast Tennessee.. His practice history includes treating patients in general family dentistry settings as well as geriatric long term care facility treatment. He is committed to staying current with the latest technology in order to provide the greatest care ...

Featured Blog Posts - Emergency Dental Care

August 14, 2019

"It doesn't hurt" - Why waiting for pain, will cause pain in your wallet

broken tooth

Working in an urgent care dental setting, I can tell you that the number one reason people are in my chair is pain.  These patients, for the most part, have known for a while that something was not right, but "it didn't hurt until now".  Patients ask me all the time when to expect pain or why one tooth hurts when another doesn't.  The answer is that teeth play by no rules.  I have seen people with large cavities, broken teeth, infection and not one bit of pain, and others ...

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