All Brite Dental

FAQs About Local Dental Anesthesia

Your dentist might need to apply dental local anesthesia to numb an area of your mouth while performing certain procedures.  Our Dearborn Dentist, and Brownstown Team do this by injecting medicine – known as a local anesthetic – into your inner cheek or gum.   

Nowadays, the most common anesthetic dentists use is Lidocaine. Novocain was a more common option a few decades ago, professionals now use other anesthetics that work better and longer.

Modern anesthetics are also less likely to cause allergic reactions compared to Novocain.  

Types of numbing injections in local anesthesia

There are two different kinds of numbing injections in dental anesthesia.

1. Block injections

These cover an entire region in your mouth. Like one side of your top jaw, for example.

2. Infiltration injections

These numb a much smaller area. Only where the injection was applied will there be numbing.

When you undergo a procedure that requires dental local anesthesia, your dentist will prepare your mouth by drying a part of it with cotton or air. Your dentist might also decide to numb the area he/she plans to inject with a gel to numb the skin. This can be helpful if you are afraid of injections.

Your dentist will then inject the anesthetic into the area he/she wants numb. You will rarely ever feel the needle. The only sensation most people feel is the sting of the medicine moving into your tissues.

These anesthetics can last as long as several hours. That means you might find it difficult to speak clearly or eat for up to seven hours after receiving anesthesia. Also, avoid eating with the side of your mouth closest to the area that was numbed until you regain feeling there since it’s possible to hurt yourself and not realize it.

Rare side effects of dental local anesthesia

Anesthetics are the most used drugs in dental offices and it’s very rare for patients to have negative reactions to them. The rare side effects associated with anesthetics include:

  • A hematoma developing if the injection hits a blood vessel.
  • Increased heart rate due to the vasoconstrictor
  • Numbness outside the area that was targeted. This can affect the way your face looks for a few hours. It can prevent you from blinking properly and other facial movements.
  • Nerve injury due to the injection striking a nerve. This can lead to pain and numbness that lasts several months until the nerve heals.
 

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