Emergency Dental Care
Do you have a toothache? A broken crown? A missing filling?
Call us right now! Most dental insurance accepted. Easy dental payment plans if you are uninsured. Same day and next day appointments available. We are even open some evenings.
Fast Dental Emergency Help
We’re Here For You
We have your relief and we have it right away!
If you find yourself in need of emergency dental care, give us a call and we will be waiting to have one of our dentists see you as fast as you can get to one of our offices. That’s right, we will see you immediately and stop the pain as soon as possible and set up a treatment plan that will solve the problem once and for all.
Like with everything else we provide, we take the hassle out of dental emergencies. No need to call a bunch of offices to see when you can get an appointment. Your emergency appointment with us is “as soon as you can get here!”
Remember we are open some evenings.
We are here to help and you will be greeted by one of our staff members with nothing short of sincere compassion and understanding. We all are familiar with that pain… you’re not alone.
We help take the stress out of dental emergencies.
Same day and next day appointments available. We are even open some evenings.
Most of us try just about anything to deal with the constant pain…endless trips to the pharmacy to buy a multitude of over the counter pain relief products, heating pads, chewing aspirin, etc. Nothing seems to help.
Our dentists are equipped to handle just about any dental emergency. In case you need an oral surgeon, we have dental surgeons we can send you to.
Poor oral health is a "silent X-factor" promoting the onset of life-threatening diseases which are responsible for the deaths of millions of Americans each year.
United States Surgeon General’s report, Oral Health in America
First Aid for Dental Emergencies
Most of us try just about anything to deal with the constant pain…endless trips to the pharmacy to buy a multitude of over the counter pain relief products, heating pads, chewing aspirin, etc. Nothing seems to help.
Our dentists are equipped to handle just about any dental emergency. In case you need an oral surgeon, we have dental surgeons we can send you to.
We know dental emergencies can be scary and painful. We have some things you can do before you can get to us.
Some Temporary Solutions You Can Try at Home
01.
Toothaches
First, thoroughly rinse your mouth with warm water. Use dental floss to remove any lodged food. If your mouth is swollen, apply a cold compress to the outside of your mouth or cheek. Take a pain reliever such as aspirin, Tylenol, or ibuprofen following the manufacture’s dosage amount after checking with your physician. You can also try an over-the-counter topical anesthetic with 5% to 20% benzocaine applied every two hours.
02.
Chipped or broken teeth
Save any pieces. Rinse the mouth using warm water; rinse any broken pieces. If there’s bleeding, apply a piece of gauze or a moistened tea bag to the area for about 10 minutes or until the bleeding stops. Apply a cold compress to the outside of the mouth, cheek, or lip near the broken/chipped tooth to keep any swelling down and relieve pain. Call our office as soon as possible.
03.
Knocked-out tooth
Retrieve the tooth, hold it by the crown (the part that is usually exposed in the mouth), and rinse off the tooth root with water if it’s dirty. Do not scrub it or remove any attached tissue fragments. If possible, try to put the tooth back in place. Make sure it’s facing the right way. Never force it into the socket. If it’s not possible to reinsert the tooth in the socket, put the tooth in a small container of milk (or cup of water that contains a pinch of table salt, if milk is not available). In all cases, call our office as quickly as possible. Knocked out teeth with the highest chances of being saved are those seen by the dentist and returned to their socket within 1 hour of being knocked out.
04.
Extruded (partially dislodged) tooth
Call our office right away. Until you reach our office, to relieve pain, apply a cold compress to the outside of the mouth or cheek in the affected area. Take an over-the-counter pain reliever (such as Tylenol or Advil) if needed.
05.
Objects caught between teeth
First, try using dental floss to very gently and carefully remove the object. Never use a pin or other sharp object to poke at the stuck object. These instruments can cut your gums or scratch your tooth surface.
06.
Lost filling
As a temporary measure, stick a piece of sugarless gum into the cavity (sugar-filled gum will cause pain) or use an over-the-counter dental cement. Call our office as soon as possible.
07.
Lost or broken crown
If the crown falls off and you can’t get to our office right away and the tooth is causing pain, use a cotton swab to apply a little clove oil to the sensitive area (clove oil can be purchased at your local drug store or in the spice aisle of your grocery store). If possible, slip the crown back over the tooth. Before doing so, coat the inner surface with an over-the-counter dental cement, toothpaste, or denture adhesive, to help hold the crown in place. Do not use super glue!
08.
Broken braces and wires
If a wire breaks or sticks out of a bracket or band and is poking your cheek, tongue, or gum, try using the eraser end of a pencil to push the wire into a more comfortable position. If you can’t reposition the wire, cover the end with orthodontic wax, a small cotton ball, or piece of gauze until you can get to our office. Never cut the wire, as you could end up swallowing it or breathing it into your lungs.
09.
Loose brackets and bands
Temporarily reattach loose braces with a small piece of orthodontic wax. Alternatively, place the wax over the braces to provide a cushion. Call us as soon as possible. If the problem is a loose band, save it and call us as soon as possible.
10.
Abscess
Abscesses are infections that occur around the root of a tooth or in the space between the teeth and gums. Abscesses are a serious condition that can damage tissue and surrounding teeth, with the infection possibly spreading to other parts of the body if left untreated. Because of the serious oral health and general health problems that can result from an abscess, call us as soon as possible if you discover a pimple-like swelling on your gum that usually is painful. In the meantime, to ease the pain and draw the pus toward the surface, try rinsing your mouth with a mild salt water solution (1/2 teaspoon of table salt in 8 ounces of water) several times a day.
11.
Soft-tissue injuries
- Rinse your mouth with a mild salt-water solution.
- Use a moistened piece of gauze or tea bag to apply pressure to the bleeding site. Hold in place for 15 to 20 minutes.
- To both control bleeding and relieve pain, hold a cold compress to the outside of the mouth or cheek in the affected area for 5 to 10 minutes.
- If the bleeding doesn’t stop, go to a hospital emergency room.
- Continue to apply pressure on the bleeding site with the gauze until you can be seen and treated.