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wisdom tooth diagnosis
wisdom tooth diagnosis
I braved a visit to the dentist today (extremely embarrassed as I said before - he's gorgeous! which makes things ten times worse.)
Anyway following a very uncomfortable and slightly awkward conversation about my BB he inspected my mouth and had a good look at my back wisdom tooth.
I have had an xray on this before and its horizontally impacted below the gum so they wouldn't extract it.
Anyway my hunk of a dentist seems to think that this may be the problem now... and wants me to keep using my dental routine of flossing/washing and waiting!
Then go back to him in 4 weeks time for another check !
Maaaannnnnnnnn - why can't these professionals give a straight decision on anything anymore!
a frustrated Sally xxx
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I still have one bottom wisdom tooth in, which like yours is horizontally impacted. Mine is very deep below the gum and isnt giving me any problems at all, but typically a tooth like this will be so close to the surface that the gum next to the adjacent tooth with which it has impacted against becomes "breached" and bacteria easily get past this "seal" along with oral debris. This can lead to decay and obvious symptoms.
Last November I had the other bottom wisdom tooth out. This tooth was normal apart from the fact there was no room for it. Half of it was embedded into the rear of my mouth. I only realised fairly recently (in terms of the amount of time spent solving my BB) what a stench was coming from around the gum of this tooth. When your whole mouth and tongue stinks and no dentist or doctor you ever saw points out this potential BB causing situation, its very easy to miss.
As far as I know, a dentist cannot extract such a horizontally impacted wisdom tooth, it's usually done under general anaesthetic at hospital because they are usually more complicated to remove than standard teeth. This is probably where your dentist is heading, and he should have explained this to you. Maybe he did but you were too busy lusting
Some people have had wisdom teeth (and other molars) extracted to rule them out as BB possibilities but unfortunately they turned out not to be the cause. My advice to you is follow you dentist's recommendation on this and CERTAINLY if you can detect any odour from around the gum get them extracted ASAP.
Hey Hali
my wisdom is also below the gum and isn't really giving me any problems at the moment.
I really really dont relish the though of going into hospital to get it extracted!
Real fear of hospitals ! I'm convinced I'd come out missing a leg or something...
I just checked and cant really smell anything when I check around the gum line....
Maybe I'm just reaching for any reason on the BB...
Will go back and see what he says
xx
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Dont forget that my remaining wisdom tooth, which sounds the same as yours, isnt causing any breath problems for me at the moment either. If you dont detect any odour then its probably not worth extracting it (as far as eliminating a potential BB cause). But remember that we can develop familiarisation to such odours in the same way that we can with our actual bad breath, so its possible you might not be able to detect the odour for yourself - try asking your dentist to test, now that you've broken the ice over your BB.
A few months ago I would have probably advised you differently, based on the fact that "cured" had no reason to believe his wisdom teeth were behind his BB, which was also his experienced dentist's opinion, but yet it turned out to be. You have to decide whether its worth the risks, but knowing that leaving in teeth in such a situation can easily lead to decay, abscesses, pericoronitis, etc.
Unless there's any sign of the tooth protruding or interfering with the seal of the gum, then I would leave it for now and focus on other areas. The fact your dentist discovered and now suspects this tooth might be the cause of your BB makes me think that he wouldnt have made such a statement without good reason.
Edit: forgot to say that sometimes with such impactions, the other teeth which are being impacted against can become damaged/cracked etc, leading to problems which might be invisible because its below the gum. See what your dentist thinks. Remember that teeth themselves can smell bad, its not always the gums, and you'd have no way of knowing a particular tooth smells.