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But i am a university student, What is the best and cheapest
way to sort this out and can i have it on the NHS.
Please help

2006-10-31 23:01:09 · 13 answers · asked by technocase 3 in Health Dental

13 answers

if you can find a N H S dentist that will take you on i will believe in the loch ness monster

2006-10-31 23:03:55 · answer #1 · answered by michael b 5 · 0 0

Hi I don't know if this will help any as I am uncertain what NHS is but I do believe that getting it looked after might be the best possible solution for you If you don't it will interfere with your concentration. You may wish to call around and seek advise and information on what the costs might be. At the same time you may well only have a cavity and not have to have the tooth pulled.

Cavities cost a whole lot less than getting the tooth pulled.
Call and seek the advise that you need right now before it gets a whole lot worse ... in the mean time to get past some of the pain
you may wish to purchase some OraJel to numb the area out.
I hope that this clears up for you really soon

2006-10-31 23:09:07 · answer #2 · answered by Spirit_Rain_3-SunShineAries 3 · 0 0

When I was a student I went to my local dental hospital. I had work done there free. You will probably be treated by a student dentist but to be honest they are sometimes better than the normal complacent dentists you get in dental surgeries. The students are always supervised and are more up to date with procedures. I'm not putting dentists down in general by the way, i think they are fantastic, apart from opting out of the NHS, Boo, hisssssss

2006-10-31 23:06:56 · answer #3 · answered by Dingle-Dongle 4 · 0 0

My dear..wisdom tooth pain is not continuous, It comes for sometime and disappear. I am suffering from last 4 years. it is best If you can tolerate otherwise take some pain killer if pain is sever. Actually pain generate because when tooth comes out it cut our skin to make space. You will better understand if you will see in mirror.

2006-10-31 23:32:10 · answer #4 · answered by Archet 4 · 0 0

Is your wisdom tooth just now coming in, or has it been in for awile?

(I ask because I'm twenty-three, and still haven't gotten mine in all the way.)

If it's still coming in, and isn't coming in sideways or anything, I wouldn't worry about it too much for now, as long as the pain doesn't persist over the course of more than a day or two.

Don't know if this will help, but I figured I'd mention it.

2006-10-31 23:40:20 · answer #5 · answered by xxandra 5 · 0 0

If it's really the tooth that's aching, you should immediately see a dentist.
If on the other hand your pain is caused by an irritation/inflammation of your gums, you can cure that yourself with mouth-wash, with a cream ad a gum-soothing toothpaste.

2006-10-31 23:15:46 · answer #6 · answered by corleone 6 · 0 0

either dental hospital, or there tends to be emergency dental services at a weekend ring the dental line to find out more
0845 769 7691

2006-10-31 23:09:15 · answer #7 · answered by redsticks34 3 · 0 0

take some painkillers and if the pain persist go and see the dentist

2006-10-31 23:11:14 · answer #8 · answered by barbara i 2 · 0 0

You could try clove oil for your toothache. More info on home remedies for tooth ache at http://aches.in/toothacheremedies.html

2006-11-02 01:37:34 · answer #9 · answered by Seema R 3 · 0 0

i would be suprised if you can find an nhs dentist who will take you on. you will probably end up having to go private, and that is not cheap

2006-10-31 23:05:09 · answer #10 · answered by david429835 5 · 0 0

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