Anonymous wrote:When I was 12 I had 3 impacted growing sideways, which they removed. Fast forward to my 30s and the fourth appeared. Growing at a slight angle. I didn't remove until it had started crowding my teeth on that side. Plus, since there was nothing above it, it literally pushed up through the gum more and more. It was so far up that when he pulled it out it took seconds.
Anonymous wrote:My dentist is not at all someone who pushes procedures in any way. But he did encourage me to get my wisdom teeth out, even though they were not bothering me one bit and were in straight.
What he said is that when you're older, you're more prone to having problems that are harder to fix, you don't heal as quickly, and are more likely to get complications.
So I got mine out at 47 and it took less than a half hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dentist is not at all someone who pushes procedures in any way. But he did encourage me to get my wisdom teeth out, even though they were not bothering me one bit and were in straight.
What he said is that when you're older, you're more prone to having problems that are harder to fix, you don't heal as quickly, and are more likely to get complications.
So I got mine out at 47 and it took less than a half hour.
I had mine out at 35. They were all impacted. The surgery itself took less than an hour but I had a long and painful recovery and some complications including dry socket and developing a hematoma. My teen DD recently had hers out, they were all impacted too, and her recovery was 2-3 days of discomfort. I so wish I had mine out earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my teens went to our regular dentist who said dd does not need hers removed, but ds does because they are impacted. It was a couple months ago. Ds's teeth have emerged, but they do not bother him at all. Do you think they always need to be removed if dentist says so? I want to schedule in summer if we do it which is why we're taking our time. I'm also weary of unnecessary procedures and it seems like opinions are divided on this topic. Wdyt? Dentist would not be the one doing it. He referred us to an oral surgeon.
Why bother going to a dentist if you don't accept professional advice? Do you think random people on the internet know more than a dentist that has examined your child?
Just schedule the surgery for Spring Break and get it done.
My dentist recommended I remove mine, but the oral surgeon he referred me to said it wasn't necessary. There's no harm in asking for another evaluation, specifically from the provider who would be doing the procedure.
You don't have to blanket "accept" professional (or any other) advice. It's advice, not orders. You get to choose for yourself, ideally after being well-informed by good counsel. Not all clinical providers' advice meets that standard. Doctors are wrong all the time.
Getting advice from medical experts is fine. Getting medical advice from random people on the internet is dumb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my teens went to our regular dentist who said dd does not need hers removed, but ds does because they are impacted. It was a couple months ago. Ds's teeth have emerged, but they do not bother him at all. Do you think they always need to be removed if dentist says so? I want to schedule in summer if we do it which is why we're taking our time. I'm also weary of unnecessary procedures and it seems like opinions are divided on this topic. Wdyt? Dentist would not be the one doing it. He referred us to an oral surgeon.
Why bother going to a dentist if you don't accept professional advice? Do you think random people on the internet know more than a dentist that has examined your child?
Just schedule the surgery for Spring Break and get it done.
My dentist recommended I remove mine, but the oral surgeon he referred me to said it wasn't necessary. There's no harm in asking for another evaluation, specifically from the provider who would be doing the procedure.
You don't have to blanket "accept" professional (or any other) advice. It's advice, not orders. You get to choose for yourself, ideally after being well-informed by good counsel. Not all clinical providers' advice meets that standard. Doctors are wrong all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my teens went to our regular dentist who said dd does not need hers removed, but ds does because they are impacted. It was a couple months ago. Ds's teeth have emerged, but they do not bother him at all. Do you think they always need to be removed if dentist says so? I want to schedule in summer if we do it which is why we're taking our time. I'm also weary of unnecessary procedures and it seems like opinions are divided on this topic. Wdyt? Dentist would not be the one doing it. He referred us to an oral surgeon.
Why bother going to a dentist if you don't accept professional advice? Do you think random people on the internet know more than a dentist that has examined your child?
Just schedule the surgery for Spring Break and get it done.
Anonymous wrote:Both my teens went to our regular dentist who said dd does not need hers removed, but ds does because they are impacted. It was a couple months ago. Ds's teeth have emerged, but they do not bother him at all. Do you think they always need to be removed if dentist says so? I want to schedule in summer if we do it which is why we're taking our time. I'm also weary of unnecessary procedures and it seems like opinions are divided on this topic. Wdyt? Dentist would not be the one doing it. He referred us to an oral surgeon.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 48 and have never had any problems with mine. I realize the plural or anecdote is not data.