Baton Rouge Dentist

Ryan P. Perry, DDS
  • Home
  • About Us
    • About Our Office
    • Meet Dr. Perry
    • Meet Dr. Nielsen
    • Request an Appointment
    • Office Hours
    • Map and Directions
    • Financial Policies
    • Free Initial Exam
  • Payment
  • Cosmetic Dentistry
    • Porcelain Veneers
    • Porcelain Crowns
    • Teeth Whitening
    • Dental Bonding
    • CEREC Crowns
    • White Fillings
  • ^
  • General Dentistry
    • Gum Disease
    • Root Canal Treatment
    • TMJ Dentist
    • Mercury Free Dentist
    • Gentle Dentistry
    • Emergency Dentist
    • Sedation Dentist
    • Pediatric Dentistry
    • Sleep Apnea
  • Reconstructive Services
    • Dental Implants
    • Dental Implants Cost
    • Affordable Dental Implants
    • Dental Bridges
    • Dental Bridge vs Implant
    • Dentures

How long can I wait to get a root canal if I don’t feel pain?

Posted on May 13, 2021 by AllSmiles.

I’m trying to figure out when I need a root canal if I don’t feel any pain. I am job searching, and if the tooth can wait, I would prefer to postpone it. My left first molar tooth is discolored, and my dentist says that the tooth is infected. She wants to complete a root canal and cover the tooth with a crown. If the tooth does not hurt, is this really urgent? – Thank you. Marcus from OK

 

Marcus,

Thank you for your inquiry. Your dentist is right; a dark infected tooth requires treatment.

Why Is Your Tooth Turning Dark?

Diagram of abscessed tooth in need of emergency dental care and root canal treatment
A dead tooth need urgent dental care to stop the infection

Your tooth can turn dark from infection. When the tooth pulp (the living tissue inside) dies, it turns dark, and the discoloration shows through your tooth. Tooth pulp contains tissue and nerves, so you will not feel pain if the tooth is dead.

Can You Delay Root Canal Treatment?

Although you do not feel pain, your tooth infection is lingering. A dark tooth means that you have probably had the infection for some time. It can spread into your bone or your bloodstream. Although you may not feel pain, other symptoms of a long-term tooth infection include:

  • A foul taste or smell in your mouth
  • Difficulty breathing or swallowing
  • Swelling in your face or cheek
  • Tenderness or swelling under your jaw or in your neck (lymph nodes)
  • Fever
  • Gum disease
  • Dehydration
  • Stomach pain
  • Fatigue

A dead tooth is an urgent matter because the infection can poison other parts of your body.

What Can You Expect with Root Canal Treatment?

Root canal treatment is painless, but your tooth will be weak. And your dentist must protect it.

  • Painless – A skilled dentist uses a local anesthetic for painless root canal treatment. But if your tooth is dead, you will not feel any nerve pain.
  • Foul smell – A tooth that has been dead for years has a bad smell. You will probably notice it and be happy that your dentist removed the infection.
  • Protecting the tooth afterward – If you have a strict budget, you do not have to get a dental crown right away. Instead, ask your dentist to complete the root canal and protect your tooth until you can afford a crown.

After the dentist completes the treatment, you will probably feel better. You might have mild symptoms that you ignored or did not associate with your tooth.

Best wishes.

Ryan Perry, DDS of Baton Rouge, sponsors this post. For more information read our post, Does a Root Canal Tooth Always Need a Crown?

Filed Under: Emergency Dentist Tagged With: Dark Tooth, dark tooth root canal, painless root canal, root canal, root canl on tooth no pain, tooth infectioin stomach pain, tooth infection bad breath, tooth infection bad taste, tooth infection fever, tooth infection lumph nodes, tooth infection no pain, tooth infection swollen face, tooth infection symptoms, tooth infection tired

Root Canal or Extraction – How to Decide Which Is Best

Posted on April 17, 2020 by AllSmiles.

In January, my dentist put a crown on an upper right molar with a cracked silver filling. He said the filling had expanded and was putting pressure on my tooth. The tooth was too weak to do another filling. I agreed to the crown, but the entire procedure was uncomfortable, my dentist couldn’t numb my gums enough, and I could feel the drilling. My dentist didn’t mention that the tooth might need a root canal later.

When my dentist tested by bite, it was painful and didn’t feel right. He couldn’t get it right to my satisfaction, so he told me to give it a few days. It was painful to chew on the tooth and to brush it and floss around it. I called my dentist’s office and left a message for my dentist. A dental assistant returned my call and said that the dentist thinks the sensitivity is normal and would decrease in a few weeks.

I had an appointment for a second crown in early March, so I thought that would be a good time for my dentist to check the first crown. During the visit, my dentist looked at the crown and put a numbing solution on it. Although he didn’t volunteer to adjust the crown, I asked, and he did, but the crown was still painful. My dentists insisted that my bite needed to be adjusted, and the crown would feel fine. Due to the pandemic, I had to reschedule twice before I could see the dentist. Now that I’ve seen my dentist, he says that the tooth has a periapical abscess. I am sure that my dentist could have done something to prevent this. Now I need an extraction. I feel that I should receive a refund, but my dentist hasn’t offered it. Will you please tell me how to get a refund from my dentist successfully? Thank you. Callie from Pensacola, FL

Callie,

We are sorry to read about your disappointing experience with your dentist. Your concern I understandable. Your dentist should have told you that root canal treatment might be needed.

We’ll share some information with you that might help in the future. Although you’ve already spent time and money on your molar tooth, we recommend getting a second opinion. An advanced cosmetic dentist will explain your options for a crown and how he or she can make treatment affordable—especially since you’ve already incurred expenses with a faulty crown. And you might need to see an endodontist (root canal specialist) to preserve your tooth instead of extracting it.

Cracked Teeth and Root Canal Treatment

  • A cracked tooth risks needing root canal treatment
  • After you receive a crown, some sensitivity to temperature changes is normal; prolonged pain is not.
  • A bite that’s off and pain when you chew are problematic. When a dentist places a crown correctly, it will blend with your bite, and you won’t notice that you have a crown.

It’s alarming that you returned to your dentist, complained about the crown, and didn’t receive prompt attention. Your dentist only wanted to give you a second crown. It seems that your dentist’s priority is collecting fees, not protecting your oral health.

Trying to Get a Refund

Although your dentist might not agree to give you a refund, there are some things you can do that might motivate him. But weigh the pros and cons first, which we describe below.

  • Online reviews – Check your dentist’s online reviews. If they don’t have many bad reviews, if you threaten to add a negative one, it may get his attention. But if there are already several bad reviews and your dentist hasn’t responded to them online, adding your complaint probably isn’t a motivator for getting a refund.
  • Complain to the dental board – Although you could complain to the dental board, your dentist’s action isn’t unusual. Your situation could be viewed as a routine dental procedure that wasn’t successful.
  • File a lawsuit – If a dentist departs from the standard of care, they can be held legally liable. Based on your description, it doesn’t sound like your dentist did that. Although your dentist might have been careless, every dentist has placed crowns and had a tooth react afterward. It seems inappropriate for your dentist to place a crown on a second tooth without resolving the issue on the first one, but if the second tooth was damaged, delaying crown placement can create more problems.

Consider Getting a Root Canal

Diagram of tooth with needing a root canal treatment
A root canal may help save your tooth. Check with a skilled dentist to discuss how treatment can be made affordable for you.

If your tooth now has a periapical abscess, the tissue inside the tooth is dead, so root canal treatment will be painless—even without local anesthetic. We recommend that you see another dentist or an endodontist (root canal specialist). An endodontist has advanced training and technology to increase the chances of successful root canal treatment. If there are any challenges in the canals of your teeth, an endodontist can handle it.

What About Extraction?

Extraction is more invasive and traumatic than a root canal. A missing tooth affects your oral health in several ways:

  • Teeth keep each other aligned. When a tooth is missing, the surrounding and opposing teeth will drift into the space and create orthodontic issues.
  • Your bite will be disrupted.
  • You can eventually experience TMJ disorder.

Ryan Perry, DDS, of Baton Rouge sponsors this post.

Filed Under: Affordable Dentist Tagged With: apicoectomy, dental crown hurts, disadvantages of tooth extraction, pain chewing, painful bite, painless root canal, root canal, root canal or extraction, sensitive dental crown

Phone number: 225-275-5910
9094 Jefferson Hwy
Baton Rouge, LA 70809
Ryan P. Perry, DDS
Phone: 225-275-5910
Ryan P. Perry, DDS
9094 Jefferson Hwy Baton Rouge, LA 70809
Google Reviews Yelp Reviews
  • Best Baton Rouge Dentist
  • Baton Rouge Affordable Dentist
  • Privacy Policy
  • Blog

©2009-2025 Ryan P. Perry, DDS • All rights reserved
Website Design and SEO by Infinity Dental Web IDW Copyright Logo

  • Home
  • About Us
    • About Our Office
    • Meet Dr. Perry
    • Meet Dr. Nielsen
    • Request an Appointment
    • Office Hours
    • Map and Directions
    • Financial Policies
    • Free Initial Exam
  • Payment
  • Cosmetic Dentistry
    • Porcelain Veneers
    • Porcelain Crowns
    • Teeth Whitening
    • Dental Bonding
    • CEREC Crowns
    • White Fillings
  • ^
  • General Dentistry
    • Gum Disease
    • Root Canal Treatment
    • TMJ Dentist
    • Mercury Free Dentist
    • Gentle Dentistry
    • Emergency Dentist
    • Sedation Dentist
    • Pediatric Dentistry
    • Sleep Apnea
  • Reconstructive Services
    • Dental Implants
    • Dental Implants Cost
    • Affordable Dental Implants
    • Dental Bridges
    • Dental Bridge vs Implant
    • Dentures
  • Click to Call
    (225) 275-5910