Painful Pulp
Your teeth contain several layers: the outer protective
enamel, a secondary layer of dentin, and an inner soft 'pulp' tissue
layer containing the
nerves, veins, arteries and lymph vessels. Each pulp chamber branches
off at the top, forming 'canals' that lead toward the tooth root tip.
These infamous ‘root canals’ serve to facilitate the ongoing
activities within the tooth. However, a deep cavity, traumatic injury,
or tooth fracture can open the canal up to bacterial infection, killing
the pulp, stimulating increased blood flow, and creating tremendous
pressure build-up within the tooth. This results in severe pain and
may initiate bone degeneration, tooth loss, and even more acute pain.
All of which simply underlines the importance of contacting us at the
first sign of pain or soreness in any of your teeth. If it’s
early enough along in the disease process, we can test the problem
tooth and recommend root canal therapy.
Easy Does It
Will root canal therapy hurt? Not with today's advanced
analgesics and technology. In fact, the entire process can be virtually
free of discomfort
and often requires only one appointment. We simply clean out the
diseased area, fill the canal with a biologically inert substance, seal
it from
further infection, and you're on your way. While some patients experience
post-procedural soreness or slight tissue inflammation, these are
controllable with over the counter analgesics. Follow up care is simply
to maintain
thorough home hygiene and visit our office regularly for cleanings
and check-ups.
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