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Wisdom Tooth and I'm a Fairy

My dentist was a beacon of serenity. He studied under the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, because he wanted to transcend dental medication.

...

Anyway.

I've had my wisdom teeth (and other teeth) taken out on many occasions by different dentists, also due to the back teeth being on a collision course with the rest of the teeth. Each occasion was a different experience.

The best experience was a private dentist with what looked to me like state-of-the-art facilities. The dentist himself looked and acted more like a car mechanic, while he was ably assisted by a very cute female New Zealander assistant. Tooth extractions were very quick and efficient under this dentist, almost painless while on local anaesthetic and ibuprofen, with no complications. All in all, I ended up having two taken out with him in total, and he was even kind enough to invite me to the opening of his new practice further away in the city.

My third extraction, my last remaining wisdom tooth, was difficult. I was now working, and again it was a private dentist near my place of work. The extraction itself was standard, but I had a dry socket afterwards, which required a sterile dressing and lots of pain relief - the pain was so bad that I ended up having to take time off work.

It was a one-off, however, as by the time I had my fourth extraction (which wasn't a wisdom tooth), under my local NHS dentist at home, things were nice and simple again. The removed molar tooth resembled the Apollo 13 service module after the explosion, so I guess removing it was a good thing - I didn't have to worry about it any more. ;)

(So yeah. I have had four teeth extracted, but only 3 of them were wisdom teeth. No-one has called me "Gappy" yet. :shifty:)

To the OP: like I say, I must stress that the experience I had after my 3rd extraction was a one-off. I was awake for all the extractions under local anaesthetic, which is the only really painful moment of the procedure, but the anaesthetic worked very quickly and you could inform the dentist if you needed more. The actual extractions themselves, apart from a lot of tugging and pulling, were not too bad at all, and on all occasions the teeth came out in one piece.

Best of luck, and I hope it goes well! :)
 
I had 4 impacted wizzies and kept getting an infection behind one that was half erupted. No dentists for me. I was summoned to max factor in hospital. The day before I was supposed to go in I phoned them and said I'd rather die than undergo surgery. Actually I don't think I was that dramatic but that was the impetus behind it. Still have all 4 now, all mostly erupted and mostly behaving themselves. In fact I have a full set of adult teeth without any fillings, which must be a rarity in itself.
 
I don't have any fillings either in my full set of adult teeth and hope to keep it that way.
 
^I have two fillings, despite excellent oral hygiene. My dentist has diagnosed me with deep grooves; basically, the natural pits in my teeth are much deeper than is normal, and so cavities are inevitable no matter how obsessive my brushing, flossing, and flouride mouth-rinsing habits might be (and they have always been obsessive). My mom has this problem too, as diagnosed by her dad, who was a dentist. The one positive? How many health problems have names that sound like a Barry White album? I mean, really...Deep Grooves.
 
I had both lower and upper wisdom teeth, along with two lower impacted molars removed in one go. Being sedated, really is the way to go because you will remember it exactly like you're falling asleep, which isn't always the case depending on what medication is used. The recovery all depends on how well you deal with pain. If you break down at the sight of blood and lose your head when you stub your toe, then you're in for a rough couple days.

I found it not to be so bad. They prescribed some decent pain killers that I ended up only using the first day. After that, it wasn't anything worse that a light headache.
 
I was knocked out when I had my 4 wisdom teeth taken out. He must have done a lot of rooting and tearing because my head was all swollen for days and I didn't eat for a week.
 
I've been fortunate that my wisdom teeth have caused me no problems. One of them is coming in sideways like that, but not really disturbing anything, just -according to my dentist- makes it harder for my Hygienist to clean the teeth well (as well as myself when I brush.) But, bah, I'm not worried about it. When it's a problem it'll get fixed.

The human body sort of sucks when you consider it grows more teeth than it really has room for.
 
For my root canals and tooth implant--night grinding has ruined my molars--Hubby got the dentist to write TWO prescriptions, either was enough. But Hubby knew I was pain-sensitive and wanted me to switch off between the two meds. I was done with them within 3 or 4 days.

For all the dental work I've had, I've been lucky with recovery. The sutures in my gums for the implant was the worst. Every time I swallowed, the threads would get a tiny yank--which hurt like a mf-er every time. Total process was 6 months, so 6 months of "Yike! Yike! Yike!"
 
Just saw this, and it reminded me of this thread. (I'm sure he's exaggerating slightly.)


M', had all four of mine out at the same time - Hi-yo, pentothal!
 
If you break down at the sight of blood and lose your head when you stub your toe, then you're in for a rough couple days.

See, I am totally like that. And I had the added complication of emetophobia (fear of vomiting) which I'd heard could happen. I was one of those people who wished I'd wake up dead instead of having to face the surgery.

I still am like that, but even so, the whole thing really went well. It really did. The LA (plus xanax beforehand) knocked me out so I had a very pleasant first day. The days after that were irritating but not intolerable. It's gross and uncomfortable, sure, but if I can get through it anyone can!
 
For my root canals and tooth implant--night grinding has ruined my molars--Hubby got the dentist to write TWO prescriptions, either was enough. But Hubby knew I was pain-sensitive and wanted me to switch off between the two meds. I was done with them within 3 or 4 days.

For all the dental work I've had, I've been lucky with recovery. The sutures in my gums for the implant was the worst. Every time I swallowed, the threads would get a tiny yank--which hurt like a mf-er every time. Total process was 6 months, so 6 months of "Yike! Yike! Yike!"

six months? oh geeeez! grrr!

Process was yanking the tooth, pouring some bone-regrow stuff in my jaw, and sewing it up.

3 months later checking that the bone had sufficiently regrown, drilling a hole in my jaw (the worst part and worse than any filling, crown, or root-canal), putting in the implant, and sewing it up.

3 months later checking that the implant was solid in my jaw and then doing the gold crown. Yeah, gold. I break porcelain crowns. All 8 molars have gold crowns.
 
bone regrow stuff? reminds me of the skeleton bottle in the Harry Potter movie! The process sounds heinous but now you can tell your hubs everything you say is golden . .
 
Yeah, I thought the same thing. It was just something to encourage the bone to grow to allow later drilling and even later to solidify the implant. I don't know, I'm not a medical person and dislike studying life sciences.

Then Hubby has a tooth go from "just fine" to rotting (oh, his breath was bad!) in only 6 months time! So he had to get an implant. I swear, it's like we're having a competition, even our dentist has commented! I've had more crowns, but he's had more teeth crowned. I have more current fillings, I've had 3 root canals whereas he's had none, and we're even on implants.
 
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