ORAL SURGERY

Professional dental care tailored to your needs

Oral surgery covers procedures in and around the mouth that go beyond routine fillings — from simple extractions to surgical removal of impacted teeth (including wisdom teeth), and sometimes pre-prosthetic or orthodontic-related surgery. We review your health, explain options, and use appropriate anesthesia so you know what to expect before, during, and after treatment.

Understanding oral surgery

Many oral surgical procedures involve removing a tooth that is badly damaged, infected, crowded, or impacted under gum or bone. Planning starts with an exam and X-rays; for complex cases we may use panoramic or 3D imaging to map nerves, sinuses, and root anatomy.

During surgery we prioritize your comfort — typically with local anesthesia, and when appropriate nitrous oxide, oral sedation, or IV sedation in coordination with your medical history. Surgical access may include lifting gum tissue, removing a small amount of bone, or sectioning a tooth so it can be removed safely.

Aftercare matters: protecting the blood clot, managing swelling, and following diet and hygiene instructions reduce complications like dry socket or infection. We provide written directions and tell you when to call.

Some patients are best treated in a hospital or with a specialist; if your case needs a higher level of care, we discuss referral and continuity so you stay informed.

What your oral surgery care may include

Consultation & diagnosis

Clinical exam, review of symptoms, and discussion of alternatives when extraction or surgery is one option.

Radiographs & advanced imaging

Periapical or panoramic X-rays; 3D scans when proximity to nerves or sinuses requires detailed planning.

Routine & surgical extractions

Removal of teeth that are erupted or require flap and bone access, including multi-rooted and fractured teeth.

Impacted teeth (e.g. wisdom teeth)

Planned removal when third molars or other teeth lack space or pose hygiene and disease risk.

Local anesthesia & comfort options

Profound local anesthesia; discussion of nitrous oxide, oral sedation, or IV sedation when suitable.

Hemostasis & wound closure

Sutures and socket management when needed to support healing.

Post-operative care & prescriptions

Pain control, swelling control, rinsing schedule, and activity limits tailored to your procedure.

Follow-up & urgent guidance

Healing checks when indicated and clear signs that should prompt a call to the office.

What to Expect

1

Evaluation & imaging review

We align your goals with exam findings and films to confirm the treatment plan.

2

Medical review & anesthesia plan

Medications, allergies, and conditions that affect bleeding or sedation are reviewed for a safe visit.

3

Pre-operative instructions

Fasting if sedation is planned, escort arrangements, and what to wear or bring.

4

Procedure day

Consent, anesthesia as planned, surgical steps, and immediate post-op care before discharge.

5

Recovery instructions

Gauze, ice, diet, hygiene, medications, and a timeline for normal soreness versus warning signs.

6

Healing follow-up

Visit or remote check when recommended to confirm tissues are healing as expected.

Frequently Asked Questions

Simple extractions remove visible teeth with forceps. Surgical extractions may need gum elevation, bone removal, or tooth sectioning. We tell you which type applies before the appointment.

If you receive sedation beyond local anesthesia or take medications that impair alertness, you will need a responsible adult escort. For local anesthesia only, many patients can drive themselves if they feel well.

It depends on the procedure and your job. Minor extractions may need only a short rest; multiple impacted teeth or sedation can warrant a few days. We give individualized guidance.

Dry socket is premature loss of the blood clot from the socket, causing pain and delayed healing. Avoiding straws and smoking and following rinse instructions lowers risk.

Strenuous activity can raise blood pressure and bleeding risk early on. We recommend a short period of lighter activity, then gradual return as healing allows.

Seek help for uncontrolled bleeding, fever, spreading swelling, trouble breathing or swallowing, or pain not manageable with prescribed care.

Why oral surgery is sometimes recommended

Teeth may be removed when they cannot be restored, threaten neighboring teeth, complicate orthodontics, or stay impacted and prone to infection. The decision balances oral health, symptoms, and your preferences.

We explain what the images show, what to expect during healing, and how this fits your overall dental plan.

First 24–48 hours after surgery

  • Bite firmly on gauze as directed; change pads when saturated.
  • Use cold compresses in intervals for swelling if we recommend them.
  • Choose soft, cool foods; avoid straws and smoking.
  • Take medications as prescribed or as approved for over-the-counter use.
  • Keep the head elevated when resting to limit swelling.

Aftercare and follow-up

Gentle rinsing may start after the timeframe we give you — not immediately, so the clot stays protected. Attend follow-up visits if scheduled, and call with any concern that does not match the recovery we described.