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My Root Canal Filling Fell Out

Posted on May 22, 2024 by AllSmiles.

I did not return to the dentist after getting a root canal last September. I still can’t afford a dentist, but the cover on the root canal tooth fell off. When I looked at the tooth in the mirror, I could see a metal rod that moved when I touched it. I don’t want to swallow the rod, but is it safe to remove it myself? Thanks. Drew

Drew,

If a root canal filling or crown falls off, see a dentist promptly instead of trying do-it-yourself methods.

What Is Root Canal Filling?

Root canal treatment steps, including opening the tooth, removing the infection, adding a post, filling the tooth, and covering it with a crown

A dental crown is the final step to protect a root canal tooth and prevent reinfection

Following a root canal, a dentist will replace the infected tooth pulp with a filling material. This filling needs protection to prevent future infection from saliva and fluids. If the filling gets compromised, the tooth can become reinfected, and you might need another root canal to save the tooth.

Protecting Your Root Canal Tooth

Dentists keep bacteria out of a root canal tooth with these steps:

  • Metal Post and Filling: Insert a metal post into the tooth for extra support and fill the tooth with dental bonding.
  • Temporary Crown: A temporary crown over the tooth provides immediate protection.
  • Permanent Crown: A permanent crown offers a durable long-term solution.

What Happens If Root Canal Filling Falls Out?

If your root canal filling comes loose, get it replaced by a dentist ASAP to save the tooth and avoid another root canal. Don’t pull the post from your tooth or wait until it falls off. Arrange financing or payment plans for your dental care and save your tooth.

Schedule an appointment with a dentist for an exam and X-ray do assess the condition of your tooth and treatment recommendations to save it.

Filed Under: Root Canal Treatment Tagged With: repeat root canal, root canal crown, root canal filling, root canal filling fell out

Root canal treatment again?

Posted on September 30, 2020 by AllSmiles.

In 2014, my dentist did a root canal on an upper right molar. Two months ago, the tooth started hurting, and it’s getting worse. Will I need an extraction and dental implant, or if I see a specialist, can they try a root canal treatment again and prevent an extraction? – Thanks. Noble R. from CT

Noble,

Root canal treatment is one of the least predictable treatments in dentistry. Even if a dentist performs the procedure correctly, it has a 5-15% failure rate.

Can Root Canal Treatment Be Repeated?

Root canal treatment can be repeated multiple times. But it doesn’t always make sense to do it. Still, there is an option before extracting a tooth and replacing it with a dental implant.

Why Causes Root Canal Failure?

Sometimes root canal treatment fails because the dentist could not completely remove the infection from a tooth. Canals in a tooth can twist and turn and make it difficult or impossible for a dentist to clean out the infection and seal out bacteria fully.

The pulp in your tooth contains living tissue, nerves, and blood vessels. A pulp chamber is in the crown of a tooth, and a pulp canal conducts blood supply and nerve in the chamber. If tooth pulp is infected, a dentist will clean out the chamber and canal and seal them to prevent bacteria from entering the tooth.

Molar teeth usually have three canals for each tooth root. But sometimes a tooth has a fourth canal that’s difficult to find and clean. Some canals have branches at right angles. A dentist has tiny, highly flexible files to insert in the tooth and remove the infected tissue, but the files cannot enter a side branch with a right angle. Although a minority of teeth have fourth canals and challenging angles, sometimes fourth canals exist and retreatment is needed. Retreatment has a 50 to 75% success rate. But if retreatment is completed by a dentist who is skilled in root canal treatment and it fails, a third treatment is likely to fail.

Root Canal Surgery

Root canal surgery is a procedure that enters the tooth through the root instead of the crown. A root canal specialist, or endodontist, performs root canal surgery, or an apicoectomy. The treatment is 50 to 75% successful. The specialist will take the following steps:

  • Make an opening in the bone
  • Cut off the root tip of the infected tooth
  • Place a small filling at the end of the tooth to seal it

But even with an apicoectomy, a specialist sometimes can’t access tooth roots, or a root’s location—such as near a nerve in the lower jaw and lip—makes surgery risky.

Extraction Instead of Repeat Root Canal Treatment?

Diagram of three phases of dental implants, for information on implants and diabetes from the office of Lowell, MA dentist Dr. Michael Szarek.

Repeat root canal treatment is an option before extraction and a dental implant

An extraction is an alternative to repeat root canal treatment. Although it’s not the first choice, sometimes even a specialist can’t save a tooth, and you’ll need an extraction and dental implant.

Schedule a follow-up appointment with your dentist to discuss your options. You can compare your dentist’s recommendation with a second opinion from a root canal specialist.

Michael Szarek, DMD, a Lowell, MA, cosmetic dentist, sponsors this post.

Filed Under: Dental implants Tagged With: apicoectomy, dental implant, extraction and dental implant, how many times can a root canal be done, repeat root canal, root canal specialist, root canal surgery, tooth extractiond, what causes root canal failure, what happens during an apicoectomy, what happens during apicoectomy, what happens during root canal treatment

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