How to Handle a Dental Emergency: The Complete First Aid Guide

Comprehensive dental emergency first aid for every common situation — knocked-out teeth, broken crowns, severe pain, abscesses, and more. From American Urgent Dental in Alexandria, VA and Greenbelt, MD.

Your Dental Emergency First Aid Reference

Dental emergencies rarely happen at convenient times. They happen at soccer games, at dinner parties, in the middle of the night. The difference between a tooth that is saved and one that is lost, or a localized infection and one that spreads, often comes down to what happens in the first 5–30 minutes.

This guide gives you clear, actionable first aid steps for every common dental emergency — what to do right now, and when to call American Urgent Dental at our Alexandria, VA (703-214-9143) or Greenbelt, MD (240-241-0342) location.

Emergency #1: Knocked-Out Tooth

TIME SENSITIVITY: CRITICAL — 30-minute window

  • Pick up the tooth by the crown ONLY — never touch the root
  • Gently rinse with milk or saline if dirty — do not scrub
  • Try to reinsert into the socket (adults only, if safe to do so)
  • If can't reinsert: store in cold milk, saliva, or Save-A-Tooth solution
  • Do NOT wrap in tissue, put on ice directly, or store dry
  • Call American Urgent Dental immediately and head directly to our office

Note: Do NOT reimplant baby teeth — see our pediatric dental emergency guide.

Emergency #2: Severe Toothache or Dental Pain

  • Rinse mouth gently with warm salt water
  • Take ibuprofen (400–600mg) for pain and inflammation
  • Apply a small amount of clove oil to the area with a cotton ball for temporary numbing
  • Apply cold compress to outside of cheek — 15 min on, 15 min off
  • Keep head elevated — do not lie flat
  • Call us if: fever, swelling, pain unresponsive to OTC medication, difficulty swallowing

Do NOT place aspirin directly on the gum (chemical burn); apply heat; use alcohol.

Emergency #3: Dental Abscess

  • Take ibuprofen for pain and inflammation
  • Rinse with warm salt water gently — do not squeeze or compress the abscess
  • Apply cold compress to outside of face — do NOT apply heat
  • Do not attempt to drain the abscess yourself
  • Call American Urgent Dental immediately — same-day emergency
  • Go to ER immediately if: fever above 102°F, neck swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing

Emergency #4: Cracked or Broken Tooth

  • Rinse mouth with warm water
  • Save any tooth fragments — store in milk or water
  • Cover sharp edges with dental wax or sugar-free gum
  • Apply cold compress to outside of cheek for swelling
  • Take ibuprofen for pain
  • Eat only soft foods and avoid chewing on that side
  • Call us same-day if: pulp is visible, severe pain, trauma-related, cuts to soft tissue

Emergency #5: Lost Crown or Filling

  • Save the crown if found — rinse gently
  • Temporary dental cement (Dentemp, Recapit) can temporarily reattach the crown
  • If no cement: a small piece of sugar-free gum can protect the exposed tooth temporarily
  • Avoid hot, cold, and sweet foods on the affected side
  • Do NOT use super glue or household adhesives
  • Call us for same-day appointment — don't leave the tooth unprotected for more than a day or two

Emergency #6: Gum or Mouth Bleeding

  • Apply firm, direct pressure with clean gauze or a clean folded cloth
  • Maintain pressure for 30–45 minutes without removing to check
  • Cold compress to outside of face
  • Sit or remain upright — do not lie down
  • Do NOT rinse vigorously or use a straw
  • Use acetaminophen for pain — NOT ibuprofen or aspirin (blood-thinning effects worsen bleeding)
  • Call us if bleeding does not stop within 1–2 hours with pressure
  • Call 911 or go to ER if: uncontrolled massive bleeding, breathing difficulty, associated with severe trauma

Emergency #7: Facial or Jaw Swelling

  • Take ibuprofen for inflammation and pain
  • Apply cold compress to outside of swollen area — 15 min on, 15 min off
  • Do NOT apply heat
  • Keep head elevated
  • Call American Urgent Dental immediately — all facial swelling related to teeth is a same-day emergency
  • Call 911 or go to ER immediately if: difficulty breathing, difficulty swallowing, neck swelling, rapidly progressing swelling

General Dental Emergency Supplies to Keep at Home

Consider assembling a small dental emergency kit: • Dental wax (covers sharp edges) • Temporary dental cement (Dentemp or Recapit) • Save-A-Tooth storage kit (from pharmacy) • Sterile gauze pads • Instant cold pack • Ibuprofen and acetaminophen • Clove oil (for temporary pain relief) • Monoject syringe (for wound irrigation) • American Urgent Dental's number saved in your phone: Alexandria: 703-214-9143 / Greenbelt: 240-241-0342 Email: contact@americanurgentdental.com

Get Same-Day Emergency Dental Care — Call or Email Us Now

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

Alexandria, VA

2616 Sherwood Hall Lane Ste 403, Alexandria, VA 22306

Phone: 703-214-9143

Greenbelt, MD

7861 Belle Point Drive, Greenbelt, MD 20770

Phone: 240-241-0342

contact@americanurgentdental.com

www.americanurgentdental.com