Root Canal Information

 

Does a root canal hurt?

Does a root canal hurt?

In a normal situation, there is no pain during a root canal. This is the majority of the time. Your dentist will get the area numb and you should feel very little, if anything.

Most patients say that it is much like getting a cavity filled and that the anticipation is much worse than the actual treatment.

The horror stories about root canal pain are from folks who ignore their symptoms and do not seek dental attention when their tooth begins to hurt, living with the pain and symptoms until infection and swelling get out of control.  A highly infected tooth is going to hurt no matter what is done to it.

These days, most dentists and Endodontist prescribe medications to get any infection under control before a root canal is performed. While you cannot have root canal treatment if you’re severely swollen to the point where you cannot open your mouth widely, an abscessd tooth needs to be treated as soon as possible so your body can heal the infection.

Some dentists will begin treatment by draining the abscess first, treating the tooth with medication, then scheduling the root canal treatment after the infection has subsided.

No dentist or Endodontist is going to perform a root canal on you if you are not numb first. It is a precision procedure. You have to be still and not move around in the dental chair. You must be numb to accomplish that.

The key is to get the tooth fixed before the infection swells your jaw to chipmunk proportions. There are times, however, when it does sneak up on you seemingly without warning. You could have an unknown fracture in a tooth that widens all of a sudden when you chew. Ouch! You’ll know it if that happens. Once that fracture reaches the inside nerve of your tooth, you will not be able to ignore the pain it can cause and will be more than happy to see your dentist or Endodontist at first available appointment.

A root canal is the answer to your pain, not a cause of it.