Dry Socket prevention and treatment

Dry Socket prevention and treatment

If there’s one dental phrase that is even more scary than ‘root canal’ it is probably ‘dry socket’.

Dry socket is a rare but extremely painful complication that can follow tooth extraction.

As well as the immediate, extreme, pain which can last days or even weeks, there may also be long term consequences: cavitation, which can take decades to develop under the extraction site.

For you to avoid dry socket, I think it’s helpful to understand the stages of healthy recovery that most people experience when dry socket doesn’t occur.

How to prevent dry socket

Healing after an extraction- without complications

Dry socket is a painful complication that can occur after a tooth extraction. As well as the immediate, extreme pain which can last days or even weeks, there can also be long term consequences: cavitation, which can take decades to develop under the extraction site.

For you to understand what causes dry socket, I think it’s helpful to explain the stages of healthy recovery which most people experience, when dry socket doesn’t occur.

Content warning: If you are squeamish about blood and graphic body processes, you might want to skip the following paragraphs and start reading again at the next heading (How to avoid dry socket).

Ideally, the socket should bleed freely during and for a short time after a tooth extraction. Once the procedure is finished, your body starts slowing the blood flow so that a clot starts to form, starting from the bottom of the socket. Eventually, a jelly-like plug fills the hole left by the tooth root. Where it’s exposed to the air and your oral microbiome, the top surface of this soft clot forms a dry scab within 2-3 days. The scab eventually dissolves or falls off in 1-2 weeks once the danger of infection has passed. At that point, you can be confident that your bone and soft gum tissues are actively regenerating to fill the socket.

During a healthy recovery from extraction, you should be able to see a black spot on the extraction site from about the third day. This black spot gets smaller day by day, perhaps also getting lighter in colour. It usually disappears completely between 7-14 days.  

Aren’t bodies amazing? Now that I’ve explained how your body forms a healthy clot that should stay in place until it naturally dissolves or falls out, keep reading to find out how to ensure that happens.

 

What is dry socket?

Dry socket occurs when something interrupts any stage of the natural healing process described above.

This might happen if :

  • the blood is unable to flow freely during and immediately after the extraction.
  • something prevents the clot from growing properly from the base of the socket to the top.
  • the scab is disturbed before it naturally dissolves or falls off.

These disruptions to the body’s natural healing process leave nerves and bone exposed inside the socket.

Bits of food, drifting bacteria or other loose materials can enter the socket and cause irritation, inflammation, or infection.

Bacteria reaching the bone can lead to cavitation, ie a hole inside the jaw bone, although this usually doesn’t become noticeable for some decades.

Home remedies for dry socket

How to avoid dry socket

Whenever I talk to anyone who is getting a tooth extracted my intial advice is always ways to avoid dry socket. Most of these recommendations are common sense. However, because most people don’t experience complications, I think that common sense is sometimes taken for granted!  Even if you are feeling  completely fine after an extraction, you should still take extra care to avoid dry socket, which can get triggered at any point before the scab falls off (7-14 days).

Ask your dentist not to use the drug Epinephrine during your procedure (some dentists routinely inject it with the local anaesthetic). It’s an adrenaline-type of medication which can slow bleeding and interfere in the body’s natural process for forming a healthy clot. Every dentist should be flexible about this, for patients who can’t tolerate adrenaline.

Make sure you follow your dentist’s instructions for aftercare, which are intended to help you to avoid dry socket. In addition I recommend:

Scheduling at least 24 hours to rest and recuperate: You may have a very easy experience in the dental chair and feel fine afterwards, but losing a tooth is still a big adjustment for your body. Immeditately post-extraction is not the time to do any exercise, including walking more than the length of the carpark or to the bus stop. If possible you should avoid lifting anything heavy, especially wriggly children.

Avoiding ‘bitsy’ food until the clot is gone: Stick to liquids for the first 24 hours, then eat soft smooth food for at least another couple of days. After day 3 you can start eating chewier food if you want but don’t eat food with little bits, like rice, rolled oats, chopped parsley, or nuts and seeds. Avoid any foods that might scratch at the clot like chips or toast. Avoid very hot or very cold food or drinks and carbonated drinks.

Don’t suck, squirt, or swish anything in your mouth until the scab is completely gone: That means don’t smoke or vape, drink through a straw, don’t oil pull, don’t use a mouthwash or water flosser, and don’t French kiss or give oral sex until the site has healed over and you can’t see the clot anymore.

Farewell to a tooth guided meditation

 What to do with dry socket 

You’ll know if you have dry socket because your jaw will hurt with a deep bone ache, maybe worse that any toothache you’ve had before. It’s often a bad kind of pain that doesn’t respond to over-the-counter painkillers.  It can keep you awake, rob your concentration and make you sad and cranky.

  • Continue with the recommendations above for avoiding dry socket.
  • Rinse your mouth gently with warm salty water after every time you eat, but don’t vigorously swish it around your mouth.
  • Be careful with what and how you eat, in order to keep the dry socket clean and avoid it getting worse.
  • Be very careful brushing the teeth closest to the dry socket.
  • Drink lots of water and herbal teas to stay well hydrated.
  • Above all, do not smoke or vape or use other tobacco products.

If you do have dry socket, I recommend going back to the dentist or endodontist both to get help with the pain and to rule out other complications. A good dentist will treat your dry socket very seriously.

Your dentist can give you prescription pain killers which should give some relief. They can also flush out anything in the socket (e.g. food debris or other loose material) which may help to ease the pain and speed your healing. If appropriate they may pack the socket with a medicated paste and cover it with a dressing. You might find they recommend another visit in a couple of days.

 

Calm & Confident in the Dental Chair

Learn how to deal with your dental fears so that you can easily open wide when you need to.

Calm & Confident in the Dental Chair is an interactive workbook for adults who are anxious about seeing the dentist, with accessible exercises, insightful journaling and simple tips to help you show up relaxed and stay at ease through any kind of dental visit.

Available as a paperback or ebook.

Extraction energetics

If I can help a client avoid a tooth extraction I will do my best. But if they decide that it’s the best option I will do everything I can to help make it an easy, uncomplicated experience. A ‘good’ tooth extraction can not only lift a physical burden but also be a portal for emotional healing.

Whether you want my help to avoid losing a tooth, or you’ve resigned yourself to a necessary tooth extraction, working with the emotional meaning of a crisis point in a tooth’s life can be profoundly transformative.  

Before an extraction, I can help you make confident informed decisions, help you have the easiest, least complicated extraction you can, with no dry socket, while caring for your whole mouth and body holistically, and set yourself up for a lifetime of oral health from here onwards.

After an extraction, if you are dealing with dry socket or another complication, I can help you identify and address any underlying emotional or energetic messages that these symptoms are carrying.  Sometimes it can make a difference just to have someone offer support, sympathy and comfort.

Where ever you are on the road through a tooth extraction, I invite you to consider starting a coaching package customised to start where you are now and help get your teeth and gum health to where you want it to be.

To find out which coaching option is most suitable for your circumstances, book a free assessment call. I will always give you my honest opinion about whether I think I can help and how much coaching you’ll need.  (Limited appointments available to suit UK and Europe time zones here).

Meliors Simms headshot

Has a dentist told you that your cavities or receding gums are your fault because you are drinking too much Coke, you don’t floss enough or you need to stop breastfeeding your baby? And you know that isn’t true!

I’m a natural oral health coach and I’m not going to blame you or shame you.
The underlying causes of your oral health issues are not your fault!

Nature or nurture, ancestry or environment, free will or systemic oppression, unconscious emotions or the degraded food system are the factors that make your teeth and gums vulnerable to disease.

Even though your tooth decay and gum disease is not your fault, it is within your power to change.

I can help you to turn your oral health around with natural strategies, healthy habits and intuitive insights. 

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Dry Socket prevention and treatment

How to have a tooth extraction with grace and ease

 

Releasing your tooth with ease

 

No one wants to lose a tooth, but sometimes a tooth extraction is necessary. 

By the time you are considering an extraction, it’s usually the end of a long series of attempts to try almost every other possible way to restore and repair the tooth.

Unfortunately, eventually, sometimes you just run out of good alternatives and have to let the tooth go.

I see a lot of preventative advice about how to avoid reaching the end of that road to extraction. Most dentists are quick to offer an implant to fill the gap afterward.

This article is offers support for the experience of releasing a tooth with grace and ease when it really is the best decision at a certain point in time.

Medieval painting of a woman having her tooth pulled

Pulling teeth doesn’t have to be brutal

Once pulling teeth was almost the first resort of some mid-twentieth-century dentists, and now it’s usually the last resort when you’ve tried everything else.

Unfortunately, it’s still standard practice for many orthodontists to recommend removing healthy wisdom teeth or premolars from young mouths.

When healthy teeth are removed the physical challenges may be similar to medically necessary extractions (see my tips below) but the emotional implications are often postponed for decades.

I have met with many adults filled with regret and delayed grief for the adult teeth that were pulled out in their teens before they understood the implications. 

Deciding to extract an unhealthy tooth as an adult can be an opportunity to heal the old trauma of the earlier loss of healthy teeth by releasing your old regrets and grief.

Dear tooth, I honour the life you shared with me and release you with love.

You can choose to turn your tooth extraction experience into a portal of profoundly transformational healing.

Download the 7-minute long MP3 audio recording to meditate with and/or use as journaling prompts.

Top tips for an uncomplicated extraction

After a tooth has been extracted, a clot will form over the extraction site. This clot is what will keep you from developing a dry socket (and possibly its long-term complication of cavitation) so you want to encourage the clot to stay in place for 5-10 days.

You’ll be able to see the clot in your gums as a black spot that gets smaller day by day, eventually getting lighter in color and disappearing completely. 

The following tips are all about helping a healthy clot to form a secure attachment and stay in place until it dissolves or falls out naturally.

1. Schedule at least 24 hours to rest and recuperate from a tooth extraction. You may have a very easy experience in the dental chair and feel fine afterwards, but losing a tooth is still a big adjustment for your body. Immediately after a tooth extraction is not the time to take any exercise, including walking more than half a block. If possible you should avoid lifting anything heavy, especially wriggly children. If you had a difficult extraction try to take an additional couple of days off from any kind of exertion.

2. Don’t suck, squirt, or swish anything in your mouth anything until the clot is completely gone. That means don’t drink through a straw, smoke or vape, don’t oil pull, use a mouthwash or water flosser and don’t french kiss or give oral sex until the gum has healed over and you can’t see the clot anymore.

3. Avoid ‘bitsy’ food until the clot is gone. Stick to liquids for the first 24 hours, then eat soft smooth food for at least another couple of days. After day 3 you can start eating chewier food if you want but don’t eat food with little bits, like rice, rolled oats, chopped parsley, or nuts and seeds. Avoid any foods that might scratch at the clot like chips or toast.

A portal for transformational healing

Dear tooth, I honour the life you shared with me and release you with love.

A tooth extraction can carry a heavy emotional burden of fear, grief, disappointment, anger, and/or despair which can add to physical discomfort at the time, and may linger if not acknowledged and integrated.

Creating a healing story to consciously work with the emotions of extraction, along with the meaning of the tooth’s archetype*, can turn an extraction experience into a portal of profoundly transformational healing. It’s one of the most powerful aspects of my work as a natural oral health coach.

I recorded a heartfelt guided meditation called ‘Farewell to a Tooth’ where you can hear my words as though you are speaking directly to a tooth that you need to release or have already lost.

You can stream the meditation for free on Insight Timer  or purchase it as an MP3 download to listen offline forever.

*Tooth Archetypes are the unique emotional associations of each individual tooth, described in my book, The Secret Lives of Teeth.

Dear tooth, I honour the life you shared with me and release you with love.

You can choose to turn your tooth extraction experience into a portal of profoundly transformational healing.

Download the 7-minute long MP3 audio recording to meditate with and/or use as journaling prompts.

Ease your anxiety before you next dental visit

Calm & Confident in the Dental Chair is an interactive workbook for adults who are anxious about seeing the dentist, with accessible exercises, insightful journaling and simple tips to help you show up relaxed and stay at ease through any kind of dental visit.

Calm & Confident in the Dental Chair
Meliors Simms headshot

Has a dentist told you that your cavities or receding gums are your fault because you are drinking too much Coke, you don’t floss enough or you need to stop breastfeeding your baby? And you know that isn’t true!

I’m a natural oral health coach and I’m not going to blame you or shame you.
The underlying causes of your oral health issues are not your fault!

Nature or nurture, ancestry or environment, free will or systemic oppression, unconscious emotions or the degraded food system are the factors that make your teeth and gums vulnerable to disease.

Even though your tooth decay and gum disease is not your fault, it is within your power to change.

I can help you to turn your oral health around with natural strategies, healthy habits and intuitive insights. 

Tooth extraction meditation

Stop tooth decay naturally

Holistic teeth healing is different from almost all the dental advice you’ve ever received.  It starts from the principle that the health of our teeth and gums is tied to the health of the rest of our body, in a two way interaction. In order, to understand holistic teeth healing strategies, you really have to understand how teeth, and the rest of your body, are connected.

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The root canal is a controversial dental procedure yet most dentists continue to recommend root canals without hesitation while other dentists believe all root canals should be removed. I believe that because everyone is unique, with different combinations of genetics, lifestyle, dental history, family histories, personal health, budgets and priorities there can be no simple answer to the question ‘should I get a root canal’. That’s why I’ve developed a checklist designed to help tease out the aspects of your unique situation that may have a bearing on your root canal decision. 

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Searching for a holistic dentist nearby

Searching for a holistic dentist nearby

FAQ : Can you recommend a good holistic dentist?

Holistic dentistry sounds like such a benign alternative to conventional dentists. My completely unscientific guess is that there a lot of people who would prefer a holistic dentist given a choice, without really knowing what it means. I’m also sure that almost all of them end up settling for conventional dentistry.

But if you’re someone who needs to avoid the mercury in amalgam fillings (or safely remove existing amalgams), or is seriously concerned about possible neurological side effects from fluoride treatments, then at some point you have probably tried quite hard to locate a holistic dentist in your area.

You’ve probably found the search for holistic dental care to be a lot more difficult than you expected.

There are all sorts of reasons you might harbour valid concerns about your dentist’s default choice of materials, procedures or philosophies.

You may have had previous over-exposure to toxins, suffer from severe allergies, live with an auto-immune condition, or have had experiences in the chair that made you mistrustful of conventional dentistry.

The point of this post is not to argue the pros and cons of these concerns (I promise to unpack these controversies elsewhere).

My intention here is to provide some guidance through the minefield of misrepresentation that you’ll get from a simple Google search for ‘holistic dentist near me’.

Screenshot of Google search for holistic dentist with drop down menu

The irresistible SEO of holistic dentistry

I’m sorry to say that the term ‘holistic dentist’ is virtually meaningless in practical terms. It’s an unregulated descriptor, so there’s nothing to stop any old dentist from calling their practice ‘holistic’ even if they only offer mainstream conventional dentistry.

As I have learned from seven years of running a natural oral health coaching business called the Holistic Tooth Fairy, ‘holistic’ is a powerful, coveted, expensive, keyword on search engines.

The people who do the marketing for dental practices know that millions of people search for holistic dentists every day. In order to show up at the top of those searches, they buy Google Ads using the keyword ‘holistic’ to get their sponsored listing displayed at the top and bottom of the first page of search results. They also salt ‘holistic’ liberally through their website copy for search engine optimization (SEO) to improve their search rankings.

Screenshot from the FAQ page on a Lumino Dental website where you can see them SEOing the heck out of their 'holistic dentist' keyword phrase. Lumino is a conventional dental franchise in New Zealand.

 

Screenshot from the FAQ page on a Lumino Dental website where you can see them SEOing the heck out of their ‘holistic dentist’ keyword phrase. Lumino is a conventional dental franchise in New Zealand.

 

How can you tell whether a dentist is genuinely aligned with holistic values you would recognise or just cynically on the holistic SEO bandwagon?  
At the bare minimum, you have the right to expect a dentist describing themselves as holistic to:
        • Take fewer x-rays than conventional dentists
        • Discuss your medical history, overall physical health and your intentions for dental health
        • Take a conservative approach to restorations (especially root canals)
        • Offer alternatives to fluoride treatments
        • Never place amalgam fillings

If you really need a dentist who practices in a way that takes the whole body system into account, avoids toxins and minimises interventions then you are better off searching for terms like:

        • Biological dentist
        • Integrated dentist
        • Functional dentist
        • Bio-mimetic dentist
        • Whole body dentist
        • Mercury-free dentist

Try using these search terms for yourself and see how far you would have to travel to visit the nearest one of these dentists.

Tell me you're a holistic dentist without telling me you're a holistic dentist

Unless you live in a large city in a wealthy country, its hard to find a biological/integrated/functional/bio-mimetic/wholebody dentist. There just aren’t very many of these types of dental specialists in the whole world!

To get a better idea of where such specialists can be found, bypass Google and use their own professional directories:

International Academy of Biological Dentistry & Medicine (IABDM) trains and certifies biological dentists, including safe removal of mercury fillings, dental ozone, mojuth meridians etc. Their membership directory indicates which members have been certified.

The International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology (IAOMT) is a science focused research academy not for profit which investigates the effects of amalgam fillings, fluoride, root canals etc. Their membership directory indicates each member’s level of training in biological dentistry, from a single course in safe mercury removal to 500 hours of scientific research. 

Holistic Dental Association (HDA) is a broad church who set a low bar to be listed as a ‘holistic dentist’ . Some of the members in their directory indicate that they don’t use amalgam fillings or topical fluoride, some indicate that they do, and most don’t give any clue. Use this directory with caution if fluoride and amalgam are deal breakers for you. 

Screenshot of Google search for biological dentist

Dental privilege

Don’t wait for an emergency before you start looking for this kind of dental care. Even if you are lucky enough to be able to find a biological/integrated/functional/bio-mimetic/whole-body dentist nearby, you might be shocked at how inaccessible they are in other ways.

The mismatch between supply and demand for ‘real’ holistic dentists make for long appointment delays. Some such dental clinics are still playing catching up with their patients after extended lockdowns. Some don’t accept new patients, or only by referral.

And make sure you are sitting down before asking about the cost of a consultation, let alone a treatment plan. If you think regular dentists are expensive, these specialists will probably put the cost of mainstream dental care in perspective.  They are also even less likely to be covered by dental insurance (private or public) than conventional dentists.

Settling for a regular, decent dentist

So what should you do when there’s a yawning chasm between the value you place on non-toxic dental care and your ability to access specialists?

I suggest that for those of us hindered by geography, finances and/or scarcity it may be easier to find a conventional dentist who is flexible and respectful of your expectations and boundaries and negotiate with them to get the level of holistic care that you want or need.  My newest book, Calm & Confident in the Dental Chair provides practical suggestions to help you navigate that challenge.

Meliors Simms headshot

Has a dentist told you that your cavities or receding gums are your fault because you are drinking too much Coke, you don’t floss enough or you need to stop breastfeeding your baby? And you know that isn’t true!

I’m a natural oral health coach and I’m not going to blame you or shame you.
The underlying causes of your oral health issues are not your fault!

Nature or nurture, ancestry or environment, free will or systemic oppression, unconscious emotions or the degraded food system are the factors that make your teeth and gums vulnerable to disease.

Even though your tooth decay and gum disease is not your fault, it is within your power to change.

I can help you to turn your oral health around with natural strategies, healthy habits and intuitive insights. 

Ease your anxiety before you next dental visit

Calm & Confident in the Dental Chair is an interactive workbook for adults who are anxious about seeing the dentist, with accessible exercises, insightful journaling and simple tips to help you show up relaxed and stay at ease through any kind of dental visit.

Calm & Confident in the Dental Chair
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