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Dental Crown - problem?



Question:

I had a new crown fitted to one of my teeth two days ago (the crown was fitted to a tooth that had a root canal filling about 6 weeks ago).

The tooth that had the crown fitted (lower left rear) feels okay, but the one immediately above it gives a small amount of pain when biting down onto the newly crowned tooth below it.

I'm wondering if the crown is slightly too high and incorrectly making contact with the tooth above it on biting. Can I test for this somehow?

Alternatively, is this likely to be still in the 'settling down' phase, ie the tooth above it isn't yet 'used to' the newly crowned tooth below it and so the upper tooth is slightly bruised? If so, perhaps that should wear off in a few days?

Due to the problems I had prior to the root canal I haven't been chewing on the left side of my mouth for at least a year - now the pain I'm getting on the LEFT upper tooth seems to be most prevalent when I chew on my RIGHT side, so perhaps, again, this is just a 'settling in' phase?


Answer: While yesterday and the previous day the pain (relatively slight (but noticeable) that it is) was consistent whenever I chewed, especially when I chewed on the right side (the crown is at the rear left side) yet I've found that today the pain has been far more intermittent and not as noticeable. It also used to be the case that when I clamped my teeth together when NOT eating I noticed pain, yet now that rarely happens.

I'm sure I'm not subconciously altering my bite.

I've also checked that my other teeth are meeting together/engaging properly and they're fine, so if it's a high bite issue then would it be the case that some teeth wouldn't engage correctly with their lower/upper counterparts?

Perhaps it's just a slight misalignment where the upper tooth bites down on the lower, crowned tooth and the upper tooth is kind of settling into a slightly new position? I mention this as I know that teeth can adjust their position and are temporarily painful while doing so (when having braces fitted for example).

If it's improving and you have no other symptoms, I'd give it a few days. I actually had my first crown ever placed this past winter (at age 53) and while the opposite tooth didn't hurt, it took quite a while for the crowned tooth to calm down. But if you find the symptoms returning or worsening, don't wait for them to get excruciating--get it checked.


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