Posts tagged “clenching”

Clenching or grinding teeth at Farnborough dentists

January 31st, 2012

A patient came to see us complaining of a tooth that has ached now and then and can sometimes  cause intense pain spreading to the ear neck and head.  She had been suffering like this for over a year!  The intense pain happened every few months.  She reported that she was highly stressed and found coming to the dentist very stressfull as she had a bad experience in the past.

On assessing her mouth, she had multiple enamel cracks expecially on her front teeth.  Her bite was overlapped in certain places incorrectly.  When she moved her jaw from left to right to simulate chewing she was constantly knocking the tooth in question.

The evidence in her mouth was showing that she was either clenching her teeth or grinding them together.  No one had ever mentioned that to her in the past and she was finally very relieved that she had found some answers.

If you clench your teeth, you are putting 10 times more pressure on your teeth.  That’s a huge amount of force.  If a single tooth is also taking all that pressure it’s no wonder it hurts.  Many people clench or grind their teeth at night and are completely unaware that they do it.  If you suffer from headaches, neck ache, or if your jaw feels stiff first thing in the morning you could be grinding your teeth.

To help this lady, we immediately recontoured her problem tooth to ease the pressure on biting.  The next step will be to make a bite guard or splint to be worn at night to reduce the clenching habit.  This has proven effects to reduce tension headaches as well as teeth grinding.

tooth grinding leading to headaches near a godalming dentists

January 19th, 2012

Teeth grinding is much more common than people think.  A client came to Time Dental suffering from sensitve teeth.  It happened every time he had something cold to drink and sometimes when he brushed his teeth.  He had been tolerating this for a very long time and thought it was normal.

On assessing his mouth, teeth and gums, he had alot of wear on his back teeth.  Vertical enamel fracture lines were also visible on the majority of his front teeth.  But he also had multiple large holes/cavities at the gum line of many of his back teeth.  He reported suffering from regular headaches and again thought that this was just something people regularly suffered from. 

What he was not aware of was that he was clenching and grinding his teeth at night and in the daytime.  If you are someone who grinds your teeth or even clench your teeth together you are putting 10 times more pressure on your teeth than normal.  This huge amount of stress causes the thinnest part of enamel on your teeth which is by the gum line to start shattering.  The end result is a hole by the gum line of the tooth called an Abfraction cavity. If left as a cavity the tooth is exposed as it has lost its enamel layer and is now susceptible to cold temperature changes and tooth decay.

To help stop the cavity from progressing, white fillings or composite fillings are a great way to seal the hole and protect the tooth around the gum line.  The next step is to deal with the tooth grinding.  The best way that consistently delivers results is to provide a night guard or splint that helps reduce the stress and tension on the teeth.  This will also reduce the occurance of headaches.