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Immediate Care for Dental Emergencies
If your child faces a dental emergency, give us a call immediately. If it is serious enough, we may instruct you to visit an emergency room. If you need urgent treatment after hours, please call our office and follow the prompts for the on-call dentist. We are always here to assist when your child’s dental health is at risk.
The first thing to remember is to stay calm. Injuries to the mouth, face, and teeth happen frequently in children. Remaining calm and taking prompt action will help minimize the damaging effects of the injury, and lessen your child’s discomfort.
Below are tips on dealing with urgent dental situations. You may want to display this list on your refrigerator or store it near your emergency phone numbers for easy reference.

Avoiding Injury
- Reduce risk for severe oral injury in sports by wearing protective gear, including a mouthguard. Ask us about creating a custom-fitted mouthguard for your child.
- Always use a car seat for young children and require seat belts for everyone else in the car.
- Child-proof your home to prevent falls and electrical injuries.
- Regular dental checkups provide us an opportunity to discuss additional age-appropriate preventive strategies with you and your child and can help her or him avoid dental injuries.
- Don’t let your child chew on ice, popcorn kernels, or other hard foods.
Toothache
Call us and visit the office promptly. To comfort your child, rinse his or her mouth with warm water. Over-the-counter children’s pain medication, dosed according to your child’s weight and age, might ease the symptoms.
You may apply a cold compress or ice wrapped in a cloth to the face in the area of the pain, but do not put heat or aspirin on the sore area. Call us for an appointment. If there is severe pain or swelling, take your child to the emergency department at your nearest hospital.
Cut or Bitten Tongue, Lip, or Cheek
Bleeding After a Baby Tooth Falls Out
Fold a piece of gauze or cloth and place it over the area with firm pressure. Have your child bite the gauze for 15 minutes. Repeat if needed.
If the bleeding continues, call us.
Cold or Canker Sores
Object Caught In Teeth
Loose Tooth
Frequently Asked Questions

