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  2. Sharp, shooting pain when you eat or drink something cold, hot, sweet or sour, or when you put pressure on the tooth could be a sign of a cavity, cracked tooth or even an exposed tooth root, per JADA.

  3. Tooth Pain: Symptoms, Risks, and What to Do If You Have ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/tooth-pain-symptoms-risks-painful...

    Tooth pain symptoms. ... Other at-home remedies for sensitive teeth also may help. If your tooth pain is caused by cavities, tartar, periodontal disease, or any other damage to your teeth, gums ...

  4. Taking NSAIDs can help relieve the discomfort of fever, muscle aches, back pain, toothaches, menstrual cramps, headaches, tendonitis, bursitis and more, says Dr. Anureet Walia, MD, a pain ...

  5. Toothache - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toothache

    When toothache results from dental trauma (regardless of the exact pulpal or periodontal diagnosis), the treatment and prognosis is dependent on the extent of damage to the tooth, the stage of development of the tooth, the degree of displacement or, when the tooth is avulsed, the time out of the socket and the starting health of the tooth and ...

  6. Salt rinse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_rinse

    Salt rinse is a saline solution mouthwash used in dentistry to treat certain diseases and reduce post-operative pain and infection. It is also offered commercially for routine oral hygiene. [ 1 ] Other names for the treatment include salt water mouthwash , [ 2 ] salt water mouth bath , [ 3 ] and saline mouth rinse .

  7. Oil of clove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_of_clove

    Applied to a cavity in a decayed tooth or tooth socket remaining after extraction, eugenol or clove oil may relieve toothache temporarily. [6] There is insufficient scientific evidence that eugenol is effective for treating dental pain. [2] [3]

  8. Dentin hypersensitivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dentin_hypersensitivity

    Dentin hypersensitivity (DH, [4] DHS [5]) is dental pain which is sharp in character and of short duration, arising from exposed dentin surfaces in response to stimuli, typically thermal, evaporative, tactile, osmotic, chemical or electrical; and which cannot be ascribed to any other dental disease.

  9. Dental anesthesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_anesthesia

    There are types of local anaesthesia that apply vibrations to the skin while the injection is being placed into the skin. This uses the gate control theory to minimise pain to the patient. The high frequency vibrations coming from the device which is attached to the syringe inhibit the pain sensations coming from the needle insertion.