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The oral surgeon's office should be able to tell you the out of pocket costs after your consultation.
Ask for Exparel--it will block the pain for a couple of days post extraction and make pain meds unnecessary. Have ice packs for the cheeks ready for the drive home. Follow the after care instructions. I had mine done after DS--way easier in your teens than your late 40s. |
| Pineapple juice helps with inflammation- start drinking day before and continue for a few days after. Also keep on top of pain meds - our oral surgeon does not prescribe narcotics but did prescribe a higher dose of Motrin which was alternated with Tylenol. Use ice consistently for the first day or two. DD had one that was very impacted - dr was not sure if they’d have to remove bone (thankfully that didn’t happen), and she had no bruising and only slight swelling on that side. Good luck. |
| such scam |
I think for my daughter the mouthwash was the worst part. Or at least it is the thing she complained the most about. 😂 |
Please tell us where you earned your DDS and how long you've been practicing dentistry. Or STFU. |
| About $750 on our dental plan. Took about a week to recover, maybe 5-6 days. I was really worried but it was only really bad the first day when she was still drugged and out of it. She never needed more than the super strength Advil she got. She didn’t take any Percocet. |
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We went to Dr. Dyzak for both kids whose molar growth was being impaired by wisdom teeth blocking that space. He is excellent I cannot recommend him enough.
We went to him when he was in Kensington but also in Boyds, where he now works exclusively https://www.drdzyakomfs.com It cost about $250 after insurance (which paid the lion's share) Delta Dental. |
Who did you go to? |
Such ignorance |
If no insurance, about $500 per tooth on average these days. Recovery is about a week to 10 days before eating regular foods again. The first 2-3 days are the worst but nothing bad, just have plenty of soft jello/tapioca type pudding foods on hand and do not use straws. |
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We really liked Dr Goldman for both our kids. He was recommended by both our orthodontist and dentist. He does take insurance.
https://drlgoldman.com/ |
| 14 yo DS had his 2 bottom wisdom teeth taken out and he was fine 3 or 4 days after and back to eating regular foods within a week. We have GEHA dental insurance and they surprisingly covered everything. |
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DC had all four removed a couple weeks before the end of summer vacation. Oral surgeon. No insurance. All were coming in sideways and at least one had erupted, opening the way for infection. They gave a prep/follow up kit with rinse, gel and spray, and prophylactic antibiotics the morning of. Did the icing religiously after. Recovery took maybe a week or ten days; the longest lasting issue was one tooth that was worse positioned than the others. Got the long lasting pain shot which seemed to help but was not 100% by itself. Used some of the 800 mg ibuprofen and some extra-strength acetaminophen. No complications. Never needed to ask for narcotic medicine.
That said, any doctor who categorically refuses to provide narcotics is one to run away from. So is anybody who tells you that young people get habituated quickly even by small amounts of pain relievers that contain narcotics. Properly used, according to directions, and for short duration, the kind of low grade narcotics typically prescribed by dentists are safe and effective. They don’t make people “high” in any meaningful sense, particularly if the person is sleeping, which is what they should be doing. The fear of narcotics, or more precisely the fear of prescribing them, is the product of the “opioid crisis,” caused by Chinese fentanyl but blamed on legitimate medication by profiteering government agencies. I echo the PP’s who caution not to “wait and see” about complications. I know two kids who got infections, likely because they abandoned follow up too early. I always thought, and still think, that the push to remove wisdom teeth is a profit-driven one in many cases. But a lot of people eventually have trouble with them long term. I think it is OK to wait, but they apparently get more firmly attached and harder to remove later in life. |
Interesting...last one was 2 years ago, Maybe it changed. |
Elevate Oral Surgery in Oakton |