Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really an option?
Yes absolutely. The oral surgeon said we could do any of the three options.
Like I said I only had nitrous oxide when I had mine out. And my 17 year old brother drove me there and back!
Please. Just because these “options” are all technically feasible —four impactions are no joke and you are being cheap and cruel to not do IV. If the kid doesn’t want it-they are naive and it would be kinder to explain the benefit and follow the ortho-surgeon’s suggestion of IV.
+1 your child has no idea what this involves.
+2
My cousin wasn't put to sleep for his impaxted wisdoms and it hurt a lot, his mom who took him for transportation, could hear him screaming from the waiting room. Please don't do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really an option?
Yes absolutely. The oral surgeon said we could do any of the three options.
Like I said I only had nitrous oxide when I had mine out. And my 17 year old brother drove me there and back!
Please. Just because these “options” are all technically feasible —four impactions are no joke and you are being cheap and cruel to not do IV. If the kid doesn’t want it-they are naive and it would be kinder to explain the benefit and follow the ortho-surgeon’s suggestion of IV.
+1 your child has no idea what this involves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really an option?
Yes absolutely. The oral surgeon said we could do any of the three options.
Like I said I only had nitrous oxide when I had mine out. And my 17 year old brother drove me there and back!
Please. Just because these “options” are all technically feasible —four impactions are no joke and you are being cheap and cruel to not do IV. If the kid doesn’t want it-they are naive and it would be kinder to explain the benefit and follow the ortho-surgeon’s suggestion of IV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m like your husband, OP—had a bad reaction to nitrous (for a less serious dental procedure) and will NEVER get it again. Made me panicky/shaky, and I felt really vulnerable. If your kid’s anxious, I would strongly recommend against this option.
I had IV anesthesia as a teenager for oral surgery, and it was very easy.
She's not anxious at all about the procedure. I have a copy of her xrays and the teeth aren't crooked and don't look they will be hard to pull out at all from what I can tell. I see online xrays for complicated widom teeth extractions where the teeth are lying sidewise or slanted. Hers are all straight and look like a good pair of pliers would pull them out. Maybe one is a little crooked.
But I am conflicted, because while laughing gas was fine for me, apparently it wasn't fine for her dad, and I certainly don't want her to be traumatized by the experience.