Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

dental work

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

This frightens me. I have to have some dental work done (its been too

long since I've been) and I'm worried about the added pain.

I've also heard that if you have to have any type of surgery, it could

aggrivate the pain. Infact, some of my friends (from a FMS support

group) say if you don't need the surgery, DON'T have it!

Keep a good thought, I'll let you know when I've had my dental work.

Koala-t hugs,

Cathy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

This frightens me. I have to have some dental work done (its been too

long since I've been) and I'm worried about the added pain.

I've also heard that if you have to have any type of surgery, it could

aggrivate the pain. Infact, some of my friends (from a FMS support

group) say if you don't need the surgery, DON'T have it!

Keep a good thought, I'll let you know when I've had my dental work.

Koala-t hugs,

Cathy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

This frightens me. I have to have some dental work done (its been too

long since I've been) and I'm worried about the added pain.

I've also heard that if you have to have any type of surgery, it could

aggrivate the pain. Infact, some of my friends (from a FMS support

group) say if you don't need the surgery, DON'T have it!

Keep a good thought, I'll let you know when I've had my dental work.

Koala-t hugs,

Cathy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

At 02:20 PM 05/15/2002 +0000, nugget6 wrote:

>Does anyone have any advice on how to get dental work done w/the least

>amount of pain possible? Are dentists trained in FMS? Just curious.

I'm struggling with this as well right now, and I'm honestly not sure. I

have a terrific dentist, but it's always an ordeal. Right now I am finally

figuring out that my facial/cranial pain is due to TMJ. I habitually grit

my teeth, and this has gotten to the point that my jaw dislocates during

dental procedures. Although my dentist has gone to the max trying to avoid

causing me any pain or making me hold my jaw open except the bare minimum

to get the job done, I'm very much afraid that it doesn't do much good any

longer. I yawned last night and my jaw dislocated. Right now I have a LOT

of pain, and didn't even go near the dentist.

I guess some pain is inevitable. My approach is this, to minimize it the

best I can. Because I have Sjogren's and that means chronically very dry

mouth, I tend to have lots of dental caries, regardless of how often I

brush and floss. I try to be prepared when facing a dental visit. My

dentist uses a slightly different anesthetic for injections, a stronger

preparation than normal novocaine. As I mentioned, minimally invasive to

try to prevent jaw problems. But mostly the aftercare is what I've learned

to do. I'm prepared with hot compresses to be applied right after I get

home, before the medications have worn off. No talking, no work, and no

solid foods for a bit after. Even with all this, my jaw usually hurts for

anywhere from a week to months after. Tylenol 3 helps quite a bit with

this, specifically for the jaw problem.

If you're having tooth pain following dental work, it could be lots of

things. Your occlusion (bite) may be somewhat off after a filling, and

that can be hard for your jaw to adjust to. Newly filled teeth can be

extremely sensitive to heat and cold, esp. if your dentist is using metal

for the fillings. Switch to porcelain fillings; they're much more

expensive but IME far less likely to cause sensitivity, even with very

large fillings. Remember that the filling is kissing up to the nerve in

large fillings, and so when you chill the filling you're hitting the nerve,

too.

I'm not sure I ascribe my pain to FMS as such, although that is certainly

possible. I hadn't considered it before. But if you have jaw pain, or

tooth pain that is dull and steady even in the absence of caries, it might

be TMJ, esp. if you have a history of grinding (bruxism) or as I do, simply

gritting. I have a prosthesis for my gritting problem, and that helps

somewhat as well (if I don't take it out while I'm asleep, as I do about

half the time). It can also be sinus problems, but only if the pain is

limited to the upper teeth; lower-jaw and tooth pain cannot be attributed

to sinus infections, normally. The test to see if your tooth pain is

sinus-related is to lean forward and let your head and shoulders drop, and

determine if this makes the pain worse. If it does, it may well be sinus

pressure. If there is no change, this may not be the problem.

Best regards,

Em

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

" Even in nice Mr. son's stories, each boy's life only catches

your deepest interest when a pirate is about to slit that sweet child's

throat. What makes a story good ain't what makes a person good. "

(Allan Gurganus)

" Cut a good story anywhere, and it will bleed. "

(Anton Chekhov)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

At 02:20 PM 05/15/2002 +0000, nugget6 wrote:

>Does anyone have any advice on how to get dental work done w/the least

>amount of pain possible? Are dentists trained in FMS? Just curious.

I'm struggling with this as well right now, and I'm honestly not sure. I

have a terrific dentist, but it's always an ordeal. Right now I am finally

figuring out that my facial/cranial pain is due to TMJ. I habitually grit

my teeth, and this has gotten to the point that my jaw dislocates during

dental procedures. Although my dentist has gone to the max trying to avoid

causing me any pain or making me hold my jaw open except the bare minimum

to get the job done, I'm very much afraid that it doesn't do much good any

longer. I yawned last night and my jaw dislocated. Right now I have a LOT

of pain, and didn't even go near the dentist.

I guess some pain is inevitable. My approach is this, to minimize it the

best I can. Because I have Sjogren's and that means chronically very dry

mouth, I tend to have lots of dental caries, regardless of how often I

brush and floss. I try to be prepared when facing a dental visit. My

dentist uses a slightly different anesthetic for injections, a stronger

preparation than normal novocaine. As I mentioned, minimally invasive to

try to prevent jaw problems. But mostly the aftercare is what I've learned

to do. I'm prepared with hot compresses to be applied right after I get

home, before the medications have worn off. No talking, no work, and no

solid foods for a bit after. Even with all this, my jaw usually hurts for

anywhere from a week to months after. Tylenol 3 helps quite a bit with

this, specifically for the jaw problem.

If you're having tooth pain following dental work, it could be lots of

things. Your occlusion (bite) may be somewhat off after a filling, and

that can be hard for your jaw to adjust to. Newly filled teeth can be

extremely sensitive to heat and cold, esp. if your dentist is using metal

for the fillings. Switch to porcelain fillings; they're much more

expensive but IME far less likely to cause sensitivity, even with very

large fillings. Remember that the filling is kissing up to the nerve in

large fillings, and so when you chill the filling you're hitting the nerve,

too.

I'm not sure I ascribe my pain to FMS as such, although that is certainly

possible. I hadn't considered it before. But if you have jaw pain, or

tooth pain that is dull and steady even in the absence of caries, it might

be TMJ, esp. if you have a history of grinding (bruxism) or as I do, simply

gritting. I have a prosthesis for my gritting problem, and that helps

somewhat as well (if I don't take it out while I'm asleep, as I do about

half the time). It can also be sinus problems, but only if the pain is

limited to the upper teeth; lower-jaw and tooth pain cannot be attributed

to sinus infections, normally. The test to see if your tooth pain is

sinus-related is to lean forward and let your head and shoulders drop, and

determine if this makes the pain worse. If it does, it may well be sinus

pressure. If there is no change, this may not be the problem.

Best regards,

Em

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

" Even in nice Mr. son's stories, each boy's life only catches

your deepest interest when a pirate is about to slit that sweet child's

throat. What makes a story good ain't what makes a person good. "

(Allan Gurganus)

" Cut a good story anywhere, and it will bleed. "

(Anton Chekhov)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

At 02:20 PM 05/15/2002 +0000, nugget6 wrote:

>Does anyone have any advice on how to get dental work done w/the least

>amount of pain possible? Are dentists trained in FMS? Just curious.

I'm struggling with this as well right now, and I'm honestly not sure. I

have a terrific dentist, but it's always an ordeal. Right now I am finally

figuring out that my facial/cranial pain is due to TMJ. I habitually grit

my teeth, and this has gotten to the point that my jaw dislocates during

dental procedures. Although my dentist has gone to the max trying to avoid

causing me any pain or making me hold my jaw open except the bare minimum

to get the job done, I'm very much afraid that it doesn't do much good any

longer. I yawned last night and my jaw dislocated. Right now I have a LOT

of pain, and didn't even go near the dentist.

I guess some pain is inevitable. My approach is this, to minimize it the

best I can. Because I have Sjogren's and that means chronically very dry

mouth, I tend to have lots of dental caries, regardless of how often I

brush and floss. I try to be prepared when facing a dental visit. My

dentist uses a slightly different anesthetic for injections, a stronger

preparation than normal novocaine. As I mentioned, minimally invasive to

try to prevent jaw problems. But mostly the aftercare is what I've learned

to do. I'm prepared with hot compresses to be applied right after I get

home, before the medications have worn off. No talking, no work, and no

solid foods for a bit after. Even with all this, my jaw usually hurts for

anywhere from a week to months after. Tylenol 3 helps quite a bit with

this, specifically for the jaw problem.

If you're having tooth pain following dental work, it could be lots of

things. Your occlusion (bite) may be somewhat off after a filling, and

that can be hard for your jaw to adjust to. Newly filled teeth can be

extremely sensitive to heat and cold, esp. if your dentist is using metal

for the fillings. Switch to porcelain fillings; they're much more

expensive but IME far less likely to cause sensitivity, even with very

large fillings. Remember that the filling is kissing up to the nerve in

large fillings, and so when you chill the filling you're hitting the nerve,

too.

I'm not sure I ascribe my pain to FMS as such, although that is certainly

possible. I hadn't considered it before. But if you have jaw pain, or

tooth pain that is dull and steady even in the absence of caries, it might

be TMJ, esp. if you have a history of grinding (bruxism) or as I do, simply

gritting. I have a prosthesis for my gritting problem, and that helps

somewhat as well (if I don't take it out while I'm asleep, as I do about

half the time). It can also be sinus problems, but only if the pain is

limited to the upper teeth; lower-jaw and tooth pain cannot be attributed

to sinus infections, normally. The test to see if your tooth pain is

sinus-related is to lean forward and let your head and shoulders drop, and

determine if this makes the pain worse. If it does, it may well be sinus

pressure. If there is no change, this may not be the problem.

Best regards,

Em

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

" Even in nice Mr. son's stories, each boy's life only catches

your deepest interest when a pirate is about to slit that sweet child's

throat. What makes a story good ain't what makes a person good. "

(Allan Gurganus)

" Cut a good story anywhere, and it will bleed. "

(Anton Chekhov)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Cathy writes,

> . Infact, some of my friends (from a FMS support

> group) say if you don't need the surgery, DON'T have it!

I would not have to worry about this one. I wouldn't think of having surgery

if I didn't need it. That I can promise you.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Cathy writes,

> . Infact, some of my friends (from a FMS support

> group) say if you don't need the surgery, DON'T have it!

I would not have to worry about this one. I wouldn't think of having surgery

if I didn't need it. That I can promise you.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Cathy writes,

> . Infact, some of my friends (from a FMS support

> group) say if you don't need the surgery, DON'T have it!

I would not have to worry about this one. I wouldn't think of having surgery

if I didn't need it. That I can promise you.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi Jeanette,

I am put under sedation to have my teeth filled etc. No matter how much

local anaethesia I hav it makes no difference I still experience pain.

Like you I did not actually associate FMS with this problem.

Does anyone else hav this problem?

gentle fibrohugs

Lin x

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 10 months later...

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...