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The First 24 Hours After Emergency Dental Treatment: A Complete Recovery Guide
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The First 24 Hours After Emergency Dental Treatment: A Complete Recovery Guide

2026-06-18

What you do in the first 24 hours after emergency dental treatment dramatically affects your recovery. American Urgent Dental in Alexandria, VA and Greenbelt, MD explains exactly what to do.

The Recovery Hours That Matter Most

You've just left American Urgent Dental. The emergency is resolved — the infected tooth was treated, the abscess was drained, the crown was cemented, the extraction is done. You're probably relieved, slightly sore as the anesthetic wears off, and maybe a little uncertain about what to do next.

The first 24 hours after emergency dental treatment are genuinely the most important for recovery. What you do — and what you don't do — in these hours has a measurable impact on your comfort, healing speed, and the risk of complications. This guide tells you exactly what to do and what to avoid, organized by the most common emergency procedures.

The Universal First 24-Hour Rules (Apply to All Emergency Procedures)

Do These Things

Avoid These Things

Procedure-Specific 24-Hour Recovery Instructions

After Tooth Extraction

BLEEDING MANAGEMENT: Some oozing is normal for the first 2–3 hours. Bite firmly on the gauze we provided for at least 30 minutes, then gently remove and check. Some pinkish-tinged saliva is normal; active bleeding that fills your mouth is not. If active bleeding continues after 1 hour of firm gauze pressure — call us.

THE CLOT IS CRITICAL: The blood clot that forms in the extraction socket is the foundation of healing. Protect it absolutely:

PAIN MANAGEMENT: Extraction pain typically peaks around hour 6–8 as the local anesthetic fully wears off. Take ibuprofen before the anesthetic wears off — don't wait until you're in significant pain. Ice applied to the outside of the face reduces both pain and swelling.

After Root Canal Therapy

The treated tooth will be sore for 1–3 days — this is normal post-procedure inflammation. The tooth may be tender when biting. Take ibuprofen on a schedule for the first 48 hours. Do not bite hard on the treated tooth until the permanent crown is placed — root-canal-treated teeth without crowns are fracture-prone.

If we placed a temporary filling: avoid sticky and hard foods on that side. Temporary fillings are designed to be temporary — they can come out with aggressive chewing.

After Abscess Drainage

After an abscess was drained (either through a root canal or by incision), you may notice the area feels different for 24–48 hours as swelling reduces. Continue any antibiotics prescribed. If swelling was significant before treatment, it should begin noticeably decreasing within 24 hours of drainage — if swelling is increasing after treatment, call us.

After Crown Recementation

Avoid sticky and hard foods on the recemented crown side for 24 hours while the cement fully sets. Do not use that side for hard chewing for at least 24 hours after recementation.

Signs You Should Call Us After Emergency Treatment

We are available to answer questions after your emergency appointment. You left our office with our contact information — please use it if you're uncertain about anything. A quick phone call resolves most post-procedure concerns in minutes. Alexandria: 703-214-9143 | Greenbelt: 240-241-0342 | contact@americanurgentdental.com.

Get Same-Day Emergency Dental Care

American Urgent Dental — two convenient locations serving Northern Virginia and the Greater DC Metro area.

Alexandria, VA: 2616 Sherwood Hall Lane Ste 403, Alexandria, VA 22306 | 703-214-9143

Greenbelt, MD: 7861 Belle Point Drive, Greenbelt, MD 20770 | 240-241-0342

📧 contact@americanurgentdental.com  |  🌐 www.americanurgentdental.com

Don’t wait out the pain.

Same-day emergency care in Alexandria, VA & Greenbelt, MD — open weekends.

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