Re: Numb Tongue
- From: Newbie <nox@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 29 Nov 2006 15:31:08 GMT
On Tue, 21 Nov 2006 22:35:49 GMT, "NOYB" <noyb@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
While I agree with your analysis, it seems a terrible waste of good pasta :-)
<nicklang907@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1164125633.222196.163080@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hello,
I went to the dentist to have a filling inserted... when the dentist
put the needle in on the right lower side of my mouth, I felt a very
strong 'tingle' or electric jolt in my tongue (and I let the dentist
know about it at the time) as though he had hit the nerve. The
procedure continued, and after the anesthetic wore off, it felt as
though my tongue is permanently burnt (numb on top, but motion of the
tongue is ok).
Is this normal? It has been several weeks now and my tongue is getting
better, but still numb on the right side (the side of the needle). I'm
hoping this is not permanent.
One more thing... the dentist did something that he called a 'trick' to
help the anesthetic become distributed into my mouth area... he
inserted the needle and started to slightly wiggle it and my jaw
around. I could feel the tingling the whole time. I am worried that
this is not a standard procedure and perhaps for good reason: if you're
on the nerve, the wiggling could continue to sever that nerve. In
other words, if he had just inserted the needle, perhaps the damage
would not be so bad.
Here's an experiment for you to try at home:
Boil a spaghetti noodle for one to two minutes. Take it out, hold it by one
end, letting the rest hang down.
Take a small push-pin and try to stab the free-hanging end of the noodle
with the pin.
No try to "cut" the noodle with the pin.
I bet you can't do it.
That anesthetic needle isn't going to cut the nerve.
.
- Prev by Date: Re: Long term fistula - other causes ?
- Next by Date: Re: Are These Fees Too High?
- Previous by thread: Re: Long term fistula - other causes ?
- Next by thread: Re: Numb Tongue
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|
Loading