I’ve always thought you shouldn’t eat for a few hours after having a tooth yanked out. Well, I got one pulled this afternoon and the instructions said “It is very important that you eat a good meal after having a tooth extraction.” I double checked to make sure I didn’t read it wrong, but I read it right.
When did this change, or has it always been this way?
The big thing is not to suck anything through a straw, no milkshakes, no sodas, no cigerattes. The vacuum in your mouth can pull the clot out. As for eating…I don’t know.
I don’t think I’d be able to eat after a tooth extraction. Maybe drink down one of those instant breakfast milkshake things, to get some nutrition in me, but actual chewing? I find it odd that they’re recommending it, but then, I’m not a dentist.
Actually, I have absolutely no pain and eat fine, but yeah, I didn’t eat anything small or spicy either. It was just weird because I have always heard you shouldn’t eat anything for a few hours afterwards. I even think I’ve always heard that you should eat anything for 12 hours afterwards.
No, you’re supposed to stick with a LIQUID diet for 12 hours afterwards. The next day, then you can go with soft foods, like mashed potatos and applesauce.
Yeah, “dry socket” is what occurs if you knock loose the scab that forms over
the healing tooth hole. Considering the hole goes right down into the bone
of your jaw, it’s important to keep infection out of there. After all, who wants to
have abscess juice trickling into their mouth all the time? If you lose the scab,
they’ve got to keep re-packing your tooth-hole with gauze.
It’s easy enough to chew on the other side of your mouth for a while, & using
a straw or, God forbid, brushing the toothless gap, need to be avoided for a few
days (a week? it’s been a while).
I’ve had quite a bit of dental work done. Those breakfast milk mixes are pretty good for post dental surgery, as are many thin soups, and gelatin. And pudding. Caramels and jerky are RIGHT out.