Post-Op Care Right After The Tooth Extraction

Following are some post-operation care you can practice after your tooth extraction:

1. Maintaining the gauze pressure


Following the extraction, some gauze for you to bite down can be placed over an extraction site. Through biting down and then maintaining the pressure on your gauze the way it has been instructed by the dentist, any active or possible bleeding should then stop. You can change a gauze pad right after the initial hour. Continue biting down for more 45 minutes when the heavy oozing keeps on. While it is normal for a bit oozing to keep on for 24 hours, you may contact your dental office when you still experience profuse bleeding or oozing.

2. Until a local anesthesia fades

Until your local anesthetic had totally worn out, it is important to protect yourself to any unintentional injuring or biting of your cheeks, gums, lips or tongue, and you have to take your medications as prescribed.

Antibiotics – when you had been given the prescription for antibiotics, make sure that you are taking the proper dosage and the full course of your medication as prescribed by your dentist.

Pain Management

It will be very helpful to take some pain reliever that your body or system is familiar in taking before your local anesthetic totally wears off. The non-aspirin or the over-the-counter pain medications can be taken to soothe any discomfort. Any pain medication prescription must only be taken through the doctor’s direction.

To Facilitate the Healing

Don’t rinse your mouth, don’t suck on candies, don’t spit, and don’t drink by using straws. It is essential to just let the extraction spot to thicken and not to dislodge the latest clot the moment it was formed.

  1. Avoid smoking - Smoking will not only prevent the clot formation, but this will also interfere with the healing process. Avoid tobacco products or smoking as much as possible.
  2. Applying ice - The ice-pack that is held in place at the facial area overlying an extraction site will help to control the swelling. For an interval of 10-minutes, apply the ice during your first day after the procedure.
  3. Watch what you drink and eat - Keep away from spicy or hot drinks and foods during the first or two days. Also, abstain from drinking any alcoholic beverages or carbonated drinks. Stick with your diet of liquid or soft foods during the first days following the surgery and consume plenty of fluids.
  4. Oral hygiene - You have to brush gently. It is important to take good care and not to irritate or disturb your tooth extracted site for a couple of days. Having a mild lukewarm saltwater mixture may be used to make your mouth feel freshen. Always remember to not spit or rinse during that first or two days. Simply let the liquids to gently fall from the mouth into the bathroom sink.
  5. Appointment for your follow-up - If stitches were placed and when complex extraction, infections, or any other issues that will require the visit to watch for the healing progress, you may be given with an appointment to have some follow-up. It is important that you keep the appointment provided to you.

When you encounter continued bleeding, more swelling, ongoing pain, having a bad taste inside your mouth, and any other not so usual symptoms, then, you may contact your dental office.

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