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[Humour] Horrific dental experience



Kosh

'The' Yaztromo
So i went in for a ‘simple extraction’

Well, let’s just say I was in the chair for an hour and a half - covered in blood with a snapped tooth and shrapnel left in my jaw that all manner of Homebase tools failed to remove. I’ve had stitches and, you know what, I feel like shit.

Apparently I have curved roots - thus removing my teeth is like pulling up a 250 year old beech with a garden spade.

Anyone else had a similar experience... ? I ended up with two dentists in the room - at that point I was about ready to cry. They were panic stricken - I actually thought; I’m going to throw up... man! that sucked.

Actually I think I’m about to cry now.
 




sydney

tinky ****in winky
Jul 11, 2003
17,965
town full of eejits
yep , had an emergency extraction in Newcastle in KZN because i bit an olive pip and a molar split straight down the middle , the pain was unreal but having an 18 st Bernard Breslaw look alike shoving all manner of garden instruments into my gob to remove the offender was worse , thank **** it was my bottom row , i think the **** would have ripped my head off if it was top row , funny now looking back on it but at the time it was like a scene from saw....come back in 3 days to get the wadding out he said .......get ****ed i said ......axe murederer masquerading as a dentist.Bruised ribs for a week and 2 days pissing blood .....not good at all.
 


Live by the sea

Well-known member
Oct 21, 2016
4,718
So i went in for a ‘simple extraction’

Well, let’s just say I was in the chair for an hour and a half - covered in blood with a snapped tooth and shrapnel left in my jaw that all manner of Homebase tools failed to remove. I’ve had stitches and, you know what, I feel like shit.

Apparently I have curved roots - thus removing my teeth is like pulling up a 250 year old beech with a garden spade.

Anyone else had a similar experience... ? I ended up with two dentists in the room - at that point I was about ready to cry. They were panic stricken - I actually thought; I’m going to throw up... man! that sucked.

Actually I think I’m about to cry now.

That’s why it’s so important to use a good dentist . One you trust and have used for a long time .
 
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Kosh

'The' Yaztromo
yep , had an emergency extraction in Newcastle in KZN because i bit an olive pip and a molar split straight down the middle , the pain was unreal but having an 18 st Bernard Breslaw look alike shoving all manner of garden instruments into my gob to remove the offender was worse , thank **** it was my bottom row , i think the **** would have ripped my head off if it was top row , funny now looking back on it but at the time it was like a scene from saw....come back in 3 days to get the wadding out he said .......get ****ed i said ......axe murederer masquerading as a dentist.Bruised ribs for a week and 2 days pissing blood .....not good at all.

Yep the nurse had to hold my head still as they twisted the ****er about and then it snapped - low down ... the rest was agonising in spite of several injections... how the hell our ancestors did it without pain relief is incomprehensible to me ... Jesus I feel like i’ve been beaten by a cave troll whilst eating lumps of a wasps nest.
 


Springal

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2005
24,785
GOSBTS
Nowhere near as bad as that but my first tooth extraction was a doddle.

The second involved 2 dentists, one pretty much kneeling on my chest, it broke in 2 and more 'work' to get it out. They were pretty worried but managed to just get it before they would have had to 'get further help'
 




clapham_gull

Legacy Fan
Aug 20, 2003
25,877
Yes last year during the lockdown. I needed two wisdom tooth removed and went for weeks with pain.

When the dentists opened I was first in the queue, but unfortunately the anaesthetic didn't work properly on the bottom tooth. The infection can basically stop the pathway to the nerve.

They were too far gone to stop - the alternative would have been to send me to A&E, which was complex at the time obviously.

So they held me down and went for it. It took about 15 minutes to get it out. Every few minutes they allowed me have a breather :)

I was so pumped with local anaesthetic at the end I asked whether I would need to come back for the other removal.

"We've done it"

I didn't feel a thing.
 


Kosh

'The' Yaztromo
That’s great by it’s so important to use a good dentist . One you trust and have used for a long time .

This was our dentist of around five years or so - usually pretty good ... I guess things go wrong ... I was just lying there thinking the toothache wasn’t this bad - lol and (yes) why me ? Whilst trying to be polite and manly ... ha !
 


Kosh

'The' Yaztromo
Yes last year during the lockdown. I needed two wisdom tooth removed and went for weeks with pain.

When the dentists opened I was first in the queue, but unfortunately the anaesthetic didn't work properly on the bottom tooth. The infection can basically stop the pathway to the nerve.

They were too far gone to stop - the alternative would have been to send me to A&E, which was complex at the time obviously.

So they held me down and went for it. It took about 15 minutes to get it out. Every few minutes they allowed me have a breather :)

I was so pumped with local anaesthetic at the end I asked whether I would need to come back for the other removal.

"We've done it"

I didn't feel a thing.

Jesus - I suddenly feel better.

Surely you cried ? Screamed or both? ... if not, sodding well done!
 




Lyndhurst 14

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2008
5,243
I had to have an apicoectomy which is done when a root canal treatment has failed. I really had no idea what was involved but said they could go ahead. It was really brutal even with the anaesthetic and I just wanted it to stop, which it didn't for about 10 minutes. It felt like some of the worst pain I had ever experienced and I can't believe it was carried out correctly but at least it went when the procedure finished. Somebody at work said as it was in New York I should sue but I was just glad to be out of that damn dentists chair.

So you have my sympathy and hope you are OK now
 


Wrong-Direction

Well-known member
Mar 10, 2013
13,638
I paid extra for a specialist to split the root of a tooth and then try and pull it out, I'm sure he had his leg up on the table for more leverage at one point

Sent from my SM-A715F using Tapatalk
 


Brok

🦡
Dec 26, 2011
4,373
So i went in for a ‘simple extraction’

Well, let’s just say I was in the chair for an hour and a half - covered in blood with a snapped tooth and shrapnel left in my jaw that all manner of Homebase tools failed to remove. I’ve had stitches and, you know what, I feel like shit.

Apparently I have curved roots - thus removing my teeth is like pulling up a 250 year old beech with a garden spade.

Anyone else had a similar experience... ? I ended up with two dentists in the room - at that point I was about ready to cry. They were panic stricken - I actually thought; I’m going to throw up... man! that sucked.

Actually I think I’m about to cry now.

Five minute job, obviously.
 




BNthree

Plastic JCL
Sep 14, 2016
11,457
WeHo
Not quite as horrific as the OP but I had to have one of my rear molars removed. For all the high tech gizmos, electronic chair, etc in the end the dentist had his knee on my chest tugging the tooth with a pair of pliers. Made me think it was quite a similar scene to a dentists 150 years ago!
 


Kosh

'The' Yaztromo
I had to have an apicoectomy which is done when a root canal treatment has failed. I really had no idea what was involved but said they could go ahead. It was really brutal even with the anaesthetic and I just wanted it to stop, which it didn't for about 10 minutes. It felt like some of the worst pain I had ever experienced and I can't believe it was carried out correctly but at least it went when the procedure finished. Somebody at work said as it was in New York I should sue but I was just glad to be out of that damn dentists chair.

So you have my sympathy and hope you are OK now

Wow - again that sounds horrific... glad you recovered.

Thanks - I had to drive home which was interesting... ermmm borderline dangerous. Actually it’s the first time I’ve been grateful for a face mask, as I walked through town to my car hiding my swollen jaw and drool...

They were like; are you okay? (errrmm no I’m not really) but I HAD to get out of there ... £100 lighter too ... paying for torture really isn’t my bag !!
 
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Kosh

'The' Yaztromo
Not quite as horrific as the OP but I had to have one of my rear molars removed. For all the high tech gizmos, electronic chair, etc in the end the dentist had his knee on my chest tugging the tooth with a pair of pliers. Made me think it was quite a similar scene to a dentists 150 years ago!

Exactly - they had smooth radio on in the background, as if I was going to humming along to Air Supply - I was thinking ****ing Anthrax would be more fitting.
 




Don Tmatter

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
5,035
dont matter
Yep the nurse had to hold my head still as they twisted the ****er about and then it snapped - low down ... the rest was agonising in spite of several injections... how the hell our ancestors did it without pain relief is incomprehensible to me ... Jesus I feel like i’ve been beaten by a cave troll whilst eating lumps of a wasps nest.

Brings back memories of a similar experience I had at a dental practice in HH, it was used as a dental school for Dentists over from Nigeria (for us NHS patients anyway, private patients had the practice owner)
 


Bry Nylon

Test your smoke alarm
Helpful Moderator
Jul 21, 2003
20,575
Playing snooker
So i went in for a ‘simple extraction’

Well, let’s just say I was in the chair for an hour and a half - covered in blood with a snapped tooth and shrapnel left in my jaw that all manner of Homebase tools failed to remove.

Now filed under: Things I wish I'd never read.
 


mune ni kamome

Well-known member
Jun 5, 2011
2,220
Worthing
I had a similar experience with a “simple” extraction at the dental surgery in Sainsbury’s Rustington. My usual lady dentist couldn’t pull it out. Tooth started breaking up. Male dentist was called for more strength. No luck, so they decided to split it in situ to see if that would be easier so they drilled it to split it in half. 2 years on now and bits are still working their way out. Luckily there’s no pain
 


Theatre of Trees

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
7,839
TQ2905
So i went in for a ‘simple extraction’

Well, let’s just say I was in the chair for an hour and a half - covered in blood with a snapped tooth and shrapnel left in my jaw that all manner of Homebase tools failed to remove. I’ve had stitches and, you know what, I feel like shit.

Apparently I have curved roots - thus removing my teeth is like pulling up a 250 year old beech with a garden spade.

Anyone else had a similar experience... ? I ended up with two dentists in the room - at that point I was about ready to cry. They were panic stricken - I actually thought; I’m going to throw up... man! that sucked.

Actually I think I’m about to cry now.

Yes, twice.

First time was way back in 1989 when a tooth had to come out due to an abcess. What was to be a routine extraction turned into a 70 minute tug of war due to exactly the same problem as yours, a twisted root. Tooth broke four times but thankfully the guy just had enough left to hold onto to get the rest of it out. Thankfully made a little easier by a very cute dental assistant in one of those white uniforms who dropped something on the floor and bent over to pick it up. The view is still firmly imprinted on my mind after 30 years.

Second time involved a broken crown during the mid 00s. This one was slow as dentist did not have much to work with in the first place and thus took about 45 minutes.

What gets me is they try to have a conversation with you whilst all manner of implements are stuck in your mouth and somehow understand what you are saying.

Dentist: So how did it break again?
Me: Ooov ploongth hoofboo?
D: What position do you play?
Me: ongoo
D: Diving at somebody's feet?
Me; Yoough
 




Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,150
Faversham
So i went in for a ‘simple extraction’

Well, let’s just say I was in the chair for an hour and a half - covered in blood with a snapped tooth and shrapnel left in my jaw that all manner of Homebase tools failed to remove. I’ve had stitches and, you know what, I feel like shit.

Apparently I have curved roots - thus removing my teeth is like pulling up a 250 year old beech with a garden spade.

Anyone else had a similar experience... ? I ended up with two dentists in the room - at that point I was about ready to cry. They were panic stricken - I actually thought; I’m going to throw up... man! that sucked.

Actually I think I’m about to cry now.

I had exactly the same. Molar snapped during extraction and the dentist had to dig it out and stitch the hole. It healed up.

Curiously, I couldn't feel any pain owing to the local anaesthetic ???

But it was a bit disconcerting having a bloke sweating and tugging at somethin in my face so hard it was stretching my neck vertebrae, while he braced himself by shoving a knee into my chest :lolol:

Anyway, here is some light entertainment.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjIL3fDxSZQ

And here is something a little more lengthy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xBJERznOgA
 


GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,186
Gloucester
My last wisdom tooth was extracted by a rather attractive little lady dentist in Edinburgh, many years ago. The poor lass had a real struggle and worked up quite a sweat. She had to clamber all over me to get enough leverage, and finished up kneeling on my chest.




I rather enjoyed it .............................
 


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