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#44
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| On 30 May 2007 08:53:35 -0700, dentistJ[at]gmail.com wrote: - quote - > 2. No smoking perferrable your whole life. Cos nicotine can cause a
Alveolar alveolitis (dry socket) is not an infection !> serious infection call "dry socket" which delay healing in serious > case your jaw bone may expose which is very painful that is gurantee! It is the loss of the clot from the boney crypt. The cause is unknown, non-smokers get dry sockets too. Dry socket may be painful but is easily treated. |
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#43
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| On May 30, 10:29 pm, Barry Price <barryjprice+use...[at]gmail.com> wrote: - quote - > Hi guys,
1.Well Barry, you can eat and ...eaten solid food already. Now you> > I visited a dentist here in Thailand with toothache yesterday, and left with > my two right-hand side wisdom teeth in a plastic bag, just 90 mins later! > > I've never had a tooth removed before, and language issues (I'm British, the > dentist was Thai) meant that communication wasn't easy. > > Anyway, he gave me an antibiotic (Amoxy) to be taken 4 times daily, and a > painkiller (Parcet) to be taken every 4-6 hours while pain lasts. > > I've got 11 Amoxys left (having taken 2 already today), so that's those > finished on Saturday morning. I've only got 3 Parcets left though. Having > taken one two hours ago, I guess I've got 10 hours of pain relief left. Ugh. > > Oh, and a bag of gauze swabs, "in case I want to change them". No instructions > as to how to do so, or why I'd want to. > > Now it's about 30 hours since the surgery. I had a cigarette about 6 hours ago, > then had the brainwave of searching the internet to see if there's anything > I should know. Number one tip seems to be don't smoke. Oops. > > I've been drinking plain bottled water, and tried (and failed) to eat some > noodles earlier, but managed better on the ice-cream. > > My big problem is that I can't actually open my mouth, or at least "un-bite" > my teeth, so to speak. I can feel the gauze on top of my "holes" - it seems to > be stiched in, and is either one pad stitched to both gums, or two pads stuck > together (with blood, I guess), but I think it's the trauma around the gums > and jaw that's causing the stiffness rather than the gauzes being tied > together. Also the right-hand side of my lips is all messed up, presumably > from where the dentist's hand was pressing while wrestling with the pliers. > > So my jaw won't let me open the back of my mouth, and the skin around my lips > will tear if I open the front. I can't change the gauzes even if I wanted to, > and obviously can't eat solid food. I'm dying for a pizza! > > How long should it be before I can > 1. eat solids > 2. smoke cigarettes > 3. drink alcohol (bearing in mind the antibiotic) > > Thanks. > > PS. I have a follow-up appointment at 1pm next Tuesday, but was hoping I'd be > able to do most, if not all, of the above before then! > > -- > Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com need to rinse out the food carefully after each meal. You can use mouth rinse or just warm salt water. 2. No smoking perferrable your whole life. Cos nicotine can cause a serious infection call "dry socket" which delay healing in serious case your jaw bone may expose which is very painful that is gurantee! 3. No alcohol with drug at any time my friend. Wait till your wound heal up first. No Alcohol with pain KILLER!! |
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#42
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| On May 30, 10:29 pm, Barry Price <barryjprice+use...[at]gmail.com> wrote: - quote - > Hi guys,
1.Well Barry, you can eat and ...eaten solid food already. Now you> > I visited a dentist here in Thailand with toothache yesterday, and left with > my two right-hand side wisdom teeth in a plastic bag, just 90 mins later! > > I've never had a tooth removed before, and language issues (I'm British, the > dentist was Thai) meant that communication wasn't easy. > > Anyway, he gave me an antibiotic (Amoxy) to be taken 4 times daily, and a > painkiller (Parcet) to be taken every 4-6 hours while pain lasts. > > I've got 11 Amoxys left (having taken 2 already today), so that's those > finished on Saturday morning. I've only got 3 Parcets left though. Having > taken one two hours ago, I guess I've got 10 hours of pain relief left. Ugh. > > Oh, and a bag of gauze swabs, "in case I want to change them". No instructions > as to how to do so, or why I'd want to. > > Now it's about 30 hours since the surgery. I had a cigarette about 6 hours ago, > then had the brainwave of searching the internet to see if there's anything > I should know. Number one tip seems to be don't smoke. Oops. > > I've been drinking plain bottled water, and tried (and failed) to eat some > noodles earlier, but managed better on the ice-cream. > > My big problem is that I can't actually open my mouth, or at least "un-bite" > my teeth, so to speak. I can feel the gauze on top of my "holes" - it seems to > be stiched in, and is either one pad stitched to both gums, or two pads stuck > together (with blood, I guess), but I think it's the trauma around the gums > and jaw that's causing the stiffness rather than the gauzes being tied > together. Also the right-hand side of my lips is all messed up, presumably > from where the dentist's hand was pressing while wrestling with the pliers. > > So my jaw won't let me open the back of my mouth, and the skin around my lips > will tear if I open the front. I can't change the gauzes even if I wanted to, > and obviously can't eat solid food. I'm dying for a pizza! > > How long should it be before I can > 1. eat solids > 2. smoke cigarettes > 3. drink alcohol (bearing in mind the antibiotic) > > Thanks. > > PS. I have a follow-up appointment at 1pm next Tuesday, but was hoping I'd be > able to do most, if not all, of the above before then! > > -- > Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com need to rinse out the food carefully after each meal. You can use mouth rinse or just warm salt water. 2. No smoking perferrable your whole life. Cos nicotine can cause a serious infection call "dry socket" which delay healing in serious case your jaw bone may expose which is very painful that is gurantee! 3. No alcohol with drug at any time my friend. Wait till your wound heal up first. Alcohol with pain KILLER!! |
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#41
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| I am a dental assistant, so I am going to share the information we give to our patients after an extraction. Four Big NO-NOs for at least 3 days after the Extraction: NO Smoking NO Drinking With Straws NO Spitting Hard NO Sucking Hard anything that creates negative pressure in your mouth can dislodge or destroy the clot. This can cause a dry socket and believe me you don't want one of those. Although it is only a form of delayed healing, the dry socket can last anywhere from 10 to 40 days and is very painful. I am not sure about the gauze that is at the extraction sight. I am wondering if it is not just stuck to the site by dried blood rather than actually sewn to the tissue. We usually have our patients bite on the gauze for the maximum of an hour and that is is. We recommend a light, soft diet for about 24 hours and then our patients eat what they want. I do tell them to stay way from really hard foods, no running down to the local Mexiacan restaurant for chips and salsa,lol. Really once the numbness from the procedure has gone away they can eat what they wish. If anything gets in the extraction site the discomfort will let them know to stop or at least be a bit more careful how they eat. Some patient do experience a stiffness of the jaw muscles around the injection and the extraction site. That may be what is causing the difficulty with opening you mouth. Use some lip balm around the lips and see if that helps. Good Luck & Hope This Helps, K |
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#40
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| On May 30, 10:29 pm, Barry Price <barryjprice+use...[at]gmail.com> wrote: - quote - > Hi guys,
1.Well Barry, you can eat and ...eaten solid food already. Now you> > I visited a dentist here in Thailand with toothache yesterday, and left with > my two right-hand side wisdom teeth in a plastic bag, just 90 mins later! > > I've never had a tooth removed before, and language issues (I'm British, the > dentist was Thai) meant that communication wasn't easy. > > Anyway, he gave me an antibiotic (Amoxy) to be taken 4 times daily, and a > painkiller (Parcet) to be taken every 4-6 hours while pain lasts. > > I've got 11 Amoxys left (having taken 2 already today), so that's those > finished on Saturday morning. I've only got 3 Parcets left though. Having > taken one two hours ago, I guess I've got 10 hours of pain relief left. Ugh. > > Oh, and a bag of gauze swabs, "in case I want to change them". No instructions > as to how to do so, or why I'd want to. > > Now it's about 30 hours since the surgery. I had a cigarette about 6 hours ago, > then had the brainwave of searching the internet to see if there's anything > I should know. Number one tip seems to be don't smoke. Oops. > > I've been drinking plain bottled water, and tried (and failed) to eat some > noodles earlier, but managed better on the ice-cream. > > My big problem is that I can't actually open my mouth, or at least "un-bite" > my teeth, so to speak. I can feel the gauze on top of my "holes" - it seems to > be stiched in, and is either one pad stitched to both gums, or two pads stuck > together (with blood, I guess), but I think it's the trauma around the gums > and jaw that's causing the stiffness rather than the gauzes being tied > together. Also the right-hand side of my lips is all messed up, presumably > from where the dentist's hand was pressing while wrestling with the pliers. > > So my jaw won't let me open the back of my mouth, and the skin around my lips > will tear if I open the front. I can't change the gauzes even if I wanted to, > and obviously can't eat solid food. I'm dying for a pizza! > > How long should it be before I can > 1. eat solids > 2. smoke cigarettes > 3. drink alcohol (bearing in mind the antibiotic) > > Thanks. > > PS. I have a follow-up appointment at 1pm next Tuesday, but was hoping I'd be > able to do most, if not all, of the above before then! > > -- > Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com need to rinse out the food carefully after each meal. You can use mouth rinse or just warm salt water. 2. No smoking perferrable your whole life. Cos nicotine can cause a serious infection call "dry socket" which delay healing in serious case your jaw bone may expose which is very painful that is gurantee! 3. No alcohol with drug at any time my friend. Wait till your wound heal up first. No Alcohol with pain KILLER!! The gauze should not be stiched in, possible is just blood sticking together. It did sounds like your operator a bit rough. |
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#39
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| Hi guys, I visited a dentist here in Thailand with toothache yesterday, and left with my two right-hand side wisdom teeth in a plastic bag, just 90 mins later! I've never had a tooth removed before, and language issues (I'm British, the dentist was Thai) meant that communication wasn't easy. Anyway, he gave me an antibiotic (Amoxy) to be taken 4 times daily, and a painkiller (Parcet) to be taken every 4-6 hours while pain lasts. I've got 11 Amoxys left (having taken 2 already today), so that's those finished on Saturday morning. I've only got 3 Parcets left though. Having taken one two hours ago, I guess I've got 10 hours of pain relief left. Ugh. Oh, and a bag of gauze swabs, "in case I want to change them". No instructions as to how to do so, or why I'd want to. Now it's about 30 hours since the surgery. I had a cigarette about 6 hours ago, then had the brainwave of searching the internet to see if there's anything I should know. Number one tip seems to be don't smoke. Oops. I've been drinking plain bottled water, and tried (and failed) to eat some noodles earlier, but managed better on the ice-cream. My big problem is that I can't actually open my mouth, or at least "un-bite" my teeth, so to speak. I can feel the gauze on top of my "holes" - it seems to be stiched in, and is either one pad stitched to both gums, or two pads stuck together (with blood, I guess), but I think it's the trauma around the gums and jaw that's causing the stiffness rather than the gauzes being tied together. Also the right-hand side of my lips is all messed up, presumably from where the dentist's hand was pressing while wrestling with the pliers. So my jaw won't let me open the back of my mouth, and the skin around my lips will tear if I open the front. I can't change the gauzes even if I wanted to, and obviously can't eat solid food. I'm dying for a pizza! How long should it be before I can 1. eat solids 2. smoke cigarettes 3. drink alcohol (bearing in mind the antibiotic) Thanks. PS. I have a follow-up appointment at 1pm next Tuesday, but was hoping I'd be able to do most, if not all, of the above before then! -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
| Tags |
| extraction, questions, teeth, wisdom |
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