Will I have pain after root canal treatment?
Root canal treatment is performed under local anesthesia, so the patient does not feel any pain while being treated.
However, once the treatment is complete, the tissues surrounding the tooth may be inflamed and discomfort may be felt when the anesthesia wears off, when chewing, or spontaneously.
If you do experience any pain, it will disappear within a few days and can usually be relieved with common painkillers.
Root canal treatments began to be performed in the 1960s, so this is a common and well-established treatment with a very high success rate that prevents the extraction of teeth that would otherwise be doomed.
Root canal treatment on baby teeth (temporary teeth)
When the cavity is very large in baby teeth and reaches the pulp, we have two treatments to perform depending on the extent of the pulp disease:
We will always try to keep temporary teeth as long as possible, treating them so that they remain in the mouth until the replacement tooth comes in, in order to maintain the space and ensure that they have room to come in without any problems.
Root canal treatment in immature permanent teeth
When a tooth has a partially formed root and we have a condition that requires us to treat the pulp, we must change our approach.
The pulp is responsible for root formation and closure. If we remove the pulp entirely and do not have root closure, we will have a tooth with an incomplete root for the rest of the patient’s life.
Therefore, we have several alternatives:
- Apicogenesis with partial pulpotomy: Whenever possible, we try to leave a portion of pulp in the canal to close the root.
- Apicoformation: If the above has not worked because the infection has spread to the entire pulp, we have to remove all the pulp and artificially seal the root tip with biocompatible materials (MTA, bioceramics, etc.).
- Pulp revascularization using an antibiotic paste: This technique has been developed in recent years and has a very acceptable success rate. It allows the root formation to be completed by allowing the blood vessels in the bone surrounding the tooth to enter through its tip and regenerate the diseased pulp that cannot perform its function.
These techniques are more complex than those used in root canal treatment on fully formed teeth, and often require more treatment sessions and closer monitoring. This is why it is very important to prevent tooth decay in children (whose teeth have not yet fully formed roots) and to avoid these treatments by filling cavities in time.