Alas! My Dental Saga Continues

After completing my 5-day course of antibiotics last Sunday, I ended up contacting my dental practice the following day to express concerns. In addition to earache, I was continuing to experience pain inside my mouth, which over-the-counter pain relief was doing nothing to ease. From my perspective, I felt the only thing the antibiotics had done was rid me of a foul taste in my mouth, caused by my "small" post-extraction dental infection. I was offered an emergency appointment for a couple of days later (1st November).

The dentist had a good look inside my mouth and said there was a tiny area of my gum that hadn't quite healed, which was exposing bare bone. He felt the exposed bone, along with post-extraction bruising was what was causing my pain. The solution was to pack the unhealed area of my gum with medicated 'dry socket' paste. Not particularly pleasant because the paste contains eugenol (found in clove oil), and tastes utterly revolting in my opinion.

In addition to acting as an anaesthetic, eugenol has anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties. Having had a dry socket on at least one occasion in the past, my experience of dry socket paste is that it initially caused a mild stinging sensation, followed by a fairly rapid easing of pain. Unfortunately, this was not my experience on Wednesday.

Currently, I am feeling rather frustrated and weary. Whilst I'm not in agony, the pain I'm experiencing is constant and proving impossible to distract myself from. It's exhausting, both physically and mentally. Come Monday, I think I'll be contacting my dental practice again to book another emergency appointment. Although it has only been just over a fortnight since the extractions were done, I'm thoroughly fed up with the fact that my dental pain doesn't appear to be easing and that OTC pain-relieving medication is proving to be ineffective.

For the record, I'm not after sympathy or dental advice, I just needed to let off steam and have a good old moan.

Parents
  • still have my wisdom teeth and sometimes they get infected and weird and give off foul tasting stuff when they get swollen.
    i switched to electric toothbrush to reach and get those areas better than manual toothbrush.

    but to actually have a dentist these days is apparently lucky as many cant get a dentist at all. imagine having this issue and pain with not a single dentist willing to see you.

    i heard of a person who was in that situation, dentists refused them but they was in agony and begging dentists to take them and offering them big sums of money, still declined.

Reply
  • still have my wisdom teeth and sometimes they get infected and weird and give off foul tasting stuff when they get swollen.
    i switched to electric toothbrush to reach and get those areas better than manual toothbrush.

    but to actually have a dentist these days is apparently lucky as many cant get a dentist at all. imagine having this issue and pain with not a single dentist willing to see you.

    i heard of a person who was in that situation, dentists refused them but they was in agony and begging dentists to take them and offering them big sums of money, still declined.

Children
  • Ouch! I do not envy you with your wisdom teeth issues. Mine were extracted in one fell swoop when I was back in my teens.

    I recently heard on the news that within the county of Worcestershire, there are no NHS dentists currently accepting new patients, resulting in an increase in patients turning up at A&E in pain due to dental issues. It's a similar situation in Herefordshire too, and I dare say in many other counties in the UK.

    It has to be said that I feel incredibly thankful to be registered with an NHS dentist in my town.