Care of your mouth after surgery has an important effect on healing. Swelling, discomfort, restricted jaw function, and skin discoloration is to be expected. However, following these instructions closely will help to insure a rapid and uneventful recovery.
Baseline Pain Control Regimen
If Additional Pain Control is Needed
For the first few hours after returning home your lips will still be numb from the local anesthesia given during surgery. While your lips and tongue are numb it is safe to eat and drink, but best to not chew to avoid inadvertent injury when accidently biting or burning your lip or tongue. Examples of foods you can eat without chewing include any liquid, smoothies, milkshakes, ice cream, yogurt, creamy soups etc.
Numbness of the lips and tongue may persist through the first evening. Once the numbness begins to wear off you can advance your diet to more substantial foods, but it is still important to chew away from the grafted site to protect it. We would recommend you stick to softer foods and chewing away from the surgical site until it is more comfortable which can take up to 2 weeks.
Mouth Rinse: Starting tomorrow you will gentle rinse with a topical antibiotic mouth rinse called Peridex twice a day, after you brush your teeth. Pills: You will also have a prescription for several days of antibiotic pills. After you pick these up at the pharmacy take them as directed on the bottle until they are gone.
Your implant will either be covered completely by gum tissue or visible only as a low-profile screw head during the time it is integrating with your bone, 3-6 months depending on the type of implant. During the first two weeks you have your implant it is important to generally avoid chewing where the implant was placed if possible. After those two weeks the soft tissue around your implant should be healed and your sutures have fallen away on their own, you should no longer need to consciously avoid chewing in that area.
It is important to resume your normal dental routine after 24 hours. This should include brushing and flossing your teeth twice a day. However, be gentle around the implant site until the soft tissue in that area has healed, typically 2 weeks. The surgical site heals best next to clean teeth.
The sutures in your mouth will dissolve on their own. This typically takes 3-10 days, however, if a suture comes out early it is not a problem. Leave the sutures alone if possible and they will take care of themselves. Often, they will come out when you are eating food and you will swallow them, that is not a problem.
Smoking has been proven to directly decrease the rate of implant success. You have invested a lot into your implant. Not smoking during the integration period can increase the success rate of your implant.
Mild activity is fine on the day after your extraction; see how you feel but don’t push yourself.
If you develop hives or a rash, discontinue all medications and immediately contact our office.
Post-surgical follow-up is an important part of your care. We want you to have a successful and comfortable recovery. Please call the office if you have any questions or concerns about your procedure or postoperative healing.