Dental Extractions
What You Need to Know About Getting a Tooth
Pulled
Dental extractions are among the easiest and
best ways to get relief from a toothache. As the name
implies, an extraction involves removing the tooth. If
your pulp has died or the tooth has become severely
infected, extraction may be your only route. Depending on
the tooth, the dentist can do either a simple extraction
or a more complicated extraction.
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Simple extractions
These types of extractions, the simple
extractions, are the most common in the world of
dentistry. During a simple extraction, the dentist will
remove the tooth by loosening the gums around the socket.
He will grasp the tooth with forceps and move it from
side to side until he can get it to break free from the
socket and remove it.
The teeth are held to the bone by a thin piece of soft tissue.
This soft tissue is known as the periodontal ligament. The
dentist uses this tissue to remove the tooth. As you may know,
the key to removing a tooth by pulling is to rock the tooth
from side to side, which enlarges the socket in the bone and
breaks the ligament that helps to hold the tooth in place.
Simple extractions, also known as pulling, don’t take long to
complete. The dentist will numb you before he starts, so you
won’t feel anything. Depending on the tooth, pulling it will
normally take just a few minutes after you have been numbed
with local anesthesia. Once completed, the dentist will place
gauze in your mouth to bite on and you will be free to
go.
Complex extractions
As we all know, not all teeth can be pulled.
Sometimes, the tooth will be so decayed or broken off
that the dentist will have nothing to grasp above the gum
line. In cases such as this, the dentist will need to
perform a more complicated extraction, which involves
getting the tooth out below the gum line, as he won’t be
able to use the standard method of pulling and
rocking.
These types of extractions involve the dentist making an
incision in the gums around the tooth, and raising the flap he
cut to expose the bone. Once he has exposed the bone, there may
be enough of the tooth exposed for the dentist to grab and
remove it using the pulling method. In most cases however, the
tooth will be embedded in the bone, meaning that the dentist
will be unable to pull the tooth out.
With teeth that are imbedded in the bone, the dentist will need
to use a drill and chip away at the bone to get to the tooth.
This is known as cutting the tooth out, and happens to be very
common with impacted teeth or teeth that are severely decayed.
Once the dentist has cut his way to the tooth and removed it,
he will sew back the flap of skin that he cut to get to the
tooth. The flap of skin and the socket will heal over time -
providing you take care of it.
Dental extractions are very common, and happen on a daily basis
for dentists. Oral surgeons are the best for extractions, as
extractions are all they do. All types of extractions, even the
most complex, will take time to heal. As long as you take care
of your extraction site, you’ll avoid common pitfalls such as
dry sockets and other mishaps. Although they can be painful
once the procedure is over - you’ll eventually start to feel a
lot better once you have had the tooth or teeth
removed.
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