After Wisdom Teeth Removal How do I recover
quickly?
After the oral surgeon extracts your wisdom tooth (or, worse, wisdom teeth), proper
aftercare is vital if you want to avoid a dry socket wisdom tooth issue and recover quickly. If you don’t take good
care of your mouth, you risk wisdom tooth dry sockets, infections, and other painful problems.
Fortunately, proper aftercare takes little time or effort.
The oral surgeon should give you a prescription for pain medicine
(vicodin,hydrocodone,etc) and antibiotics during this consultation. Go and get your prescription filled well in
advance of the wisdom tooth removal surgery so that you don't need to stress about it on the day of your
surgery.
- Avoid talking as much as possible for at least twenty-four hours after the
surgery. Moving your mouth can disturb the removal site, which can
impede clotting. You want a blood clot in the socket so that the healing process can begin. Communicate with a
pen and paper, sign language, or some other non-verbal method. This will be frustrating, especially if you love
talking, but you’ll be more comfortable this way.
- Be as still as you can for at least one day – if not two. Going
to the gym, chasing your kids around in the yard, or moving furniture can disturb your blood clot. So can
less-intense activities like washing the car and taking out the trash. The first twenty-four hours following
surgery are the most crucial, so be as still as possible.
- Don’t spit. You want to clear out
your mouth, but don’t. Yes, your saliva is disgusting. Yes, this is uncomfortable. And yes, your natural
response is to spit out anything that you don’t like. But spitting can interfere with the clot. Use a paper
towel to gently wipe around your mouth instead.
- Change the gauze in your mouth on a regular basis. How long you
can go between gauze changes depends on how much you’re still bleeding. Try to keep fairly-fresh gauze in
there, as this is more absorbent than the gauze you’ve left in the socket for an hour and a half.
- Do not use a drinking straw. The suction isn’t good for the
clot. Take small sips from a glass or can instead. You need to be careful, though, especially with carbonated
beverages. The bubbles aren’t necessarily good for the removal site.
- Keep your tongue, fingers, et cetera away from the wisdom tooth
socket. The more you tongue, probe or poke, the worse off you’ll be. Interfering with the socket
can loosen the clot – or make you sorer than you already are. Your tongue will want to explore this area, but
try to keep that from happening.
- Stick to cool or room-temperature foods. Hot food can make your
removal site feel worse, as can cold food. You should also avoid food that requires chewing, at least for the
first day or two. After that, a soft diet should be just fine.
- Avoid tobacco products for the first few days. This might be a
good time to quit smoking or dipping, actually, because you really aren’t supposed to partake during the first
few days after your removal(s).
Your dentist should give you a list of aftercare
instructions.
Typically, this is a printout that you can take home with you for easy
reference.
You should follow all of the advice on this sheet. Be sure to contact your dentist if
something isn’t clear, or if you have any questions. Taking proper care of your mouth after removals is very
important, so be sure that you know exactly what to do.
The better your aftercare, the faster and easier you will heal. Soon, you’ll be right back
to your normal, everyday life – from exercise to eating. You'll never have to
have wisdom teeth removal surgery again.
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