 If
you are an existing patient of our office and your child is
experiencing a dental emergency, Dr. Blankenship can be
reached on her pager by calling (727) 257-5512.
If this is not a dental emergency, please contact our
office, at (727) 446-4699, during our regular business
hours, 9 AM to 5 PM - Monday through Friday.
Dental Emergency Procedures
 It
is the unusual child who does not suffer some kind of injury
during his childhood. These injuries are always unexpected
and often more serious than they appear. Calm and prompt
action can help minimize the damaging effects of injury and
lessen your child's pain and fear.
Injuries to the mouth, face, and teeth happen frequently,
and go from the simple to the complex. Most injuries to the
young permanent teeth happen from falls. Contact sports
account for many more. Some injuries can be treated properly
by a parent; others require the services of a dentist.
Severe injuries to the head, neck, and face may need the
services available in the emergency room of a hospital. Such
injuries are often the result of automobile accidents.
All injuries should be treated as soon as possible, to save
your child from unnecessary pain and in some cases to save a
tooth. Whenever the face, lips, cheeks, or tongue are cut
and bleeding, pieces of dirt, debris or fragments of
fractured teeth may be imbedded in the cut.
Toothache
 This
is by far the most common cause of dental pain in a child.
It is usually caused by untreated tooth decay. Have your
child rinse his mouth with warm water and carefully remove
food from between teeth in the area of the pain with dental
floss. If swelling is present, apply cold compresses to the
cheek made by wrapping a small towel around a plastic bag
filled with ice. Lacking ice use a cold wet towel. Never use
heat or aspirin placed on the gum or aching tooth.
- Rinse the mouth with warm water to
clean it out.
- Use dental floss to remove any food
that might be trapped between the teeth.
- Do
not place
aspirin on the aching tooth or gum tissues.
- See your dentist as soon as possible.
Problems with braces and retainers
 If
an end of the brace is loose, you can make your child
comfortable by covering the end of the wire with cotton,
gauze, wax, or chewing gum. If the entire brace is loose,
try gently to remove it from his mouth. Do not use force.
If successful, place the appliance in a small container and
see your orthodontist immediately.
If the appliance is embedded in the gum, tongue, or cheek,
do not try to remove it. See your orthodontist immediately.
- If a wire is causing irritation,
cover the end with a small cotton ball, beeswax, a piece
of gauze, or chewing gum, until you can get to the
orthodontist.
- If the entire brace is loose, try
gently to remove it from his mouth. Do not use force.
- If a wire is stuck in the cheek,
tongue or gums tissue, do not attempt to remove it. Go
to your orthodontist immediately.
- If an appliance becomes loose or a
piece of it breaks, take the appliance and the piece to
your orthodontist.
Knocked-out tooth
Never scrub the tooth or immerse it in a cleaning or
sterilizing liquid. Rinse the tooth gently in tap water and
attempt to replace it in the socket. If successful, hold the
tooth in place or have the child bite against a gauze pack
to hold it in place. If you cannot replace it, put the tooth
in a container of cool water or milk and see a dentist
immediately.
The tooth should be replaced in the socket within an hour of
the accident, if it is to have a chance for survival.
- If the tooth is dirty, rinse it
gently in running water.
- Do not scrub it or remove any
attached tissue fragments.
- Gently insert and hold the tooth in
the socket.
- If this is not possible, place tooth
in a cup of milk, or when milk is not available, in a
cup of cool water.
- Go immediately to your dentist! Don't
forget to bring the tooth!
Broken tooth
 The
mouth should be rinsed with warm water to remove dirt and
other debris from the area of the broken tooth. Apply cold
compresses to the lip and face in the area of the injured
tooth to control swelling.
- Gently clean dirt from the injured
area with warm water.
- Place cold compresses on the face, in
the area of the injured tooth, to decrease swelling.
- Go to the dentist immediately.
Bitten tongue or lip
Apply pressure to the cut with clean gauze or cloth. Apply
ice directly to the wound or cold compresses to the face in
the area of the wound, to control swelling.
If bleeding cannot be stopped within a few minutes, take
your child to a hospital emergency room immediately.
Children, particularly small children, can easily severely
damage a lip, cheek, or tongue that is anesthetized, by
biting it. Children who have received a local dental
anesthetic should be carefully observed until the numbness
of the tissue is gone.
If damage does occur, see your dentist immediately.
- Apply direct pressure to the bleeding
area with a clean cloth.
- If swelling is present, apply cold
compresses.
- If bleeding does not stop go to the
emergency room.
Objects caught between teeth
Try removing a wedged object with dental floss. Guide the
floss carefully, to avoid cutting the gum. Do not use tooth
picks or other sharp instruments.
If you fail to remove the object, call your dentist for
advice.
- Try to remove the object with floss.
- Guide the floss carefully to avoid
cutting the gums.
- If you're not successful in removing
the object, go to the dentist.
- Do not try to remove the object with
a sharp or pointed instrument.
Possible broken jaw
If a jaw fracture is suspected, it should be treated as a
fracture: Movement of the jaws should be prevented by
wrapping a towel or cloth under the lower jaw and across the
top of the head and holding it tight.
Cold compresses will keep swelling down while the child is
taken to a hospital emergency room immediately.
- Do not move the jaw.
- Secure the jaw in place by tying a
handkerchief, necktie, or towel around the jaw and over
the top of the head.
- If swelling is present, apply cold
compresses.
- Go immediately to a hospital
emergency room, or call your dentist.
If a dental emergency happens while you are
traveling
- Look in the yellow pages under
"dentist" to find the state or local dental society
phone number to get a referral.
- Ask a hospital emergency room to
recommend a dentist.
- If you are out of the country,
contact the US Embassy or ask hotel personnel to refer
you to a dentist.
Be prepared
Being prepared for a dental emergency is no accident. It
takes a little time and thought, but by knowing what to do
before an accident happens, you may someday save a tooth -
yours or someone else's.
- As in all matters of health,
prevention of disease and injury are the best policy.
Some injuries can be prevented by taking certain
precautions.
- Children in contact sports should
wear mouthguards.
- Children and infants when riding in a
car should be firmly held in their seats by seat belts.
Never allow an exception.
- Keep loose objects off the floor
where children can trip over them.
- Keep bureau drawers and doors closed.
- Keep electrical outlets covered and
electrical cords disconnected.
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