Do you have a filling in the tooth in question? If you do, it is more that likely that the tooth started decay below the existing filling. This happens because when the dentist told you that the filling should be replaced, you didn't do it.
I know this because it just happened to me. I ended up breaking the tooth, and because of the substantial amount of decay that the tooth had to be pulled.
Get it taken care of soon. If the tooth doesn't hurt now, it will soon. Based on my experience, I am going out on a limb to tell you this, but you will probably need a root canal.
To answer your question, this is not something that can be treated naturally. The only thing that will be used that could be natural are the anesthetic for the extraction, and the post-op pain medications and maybe antibiotics.
Good luck.
2006-11-25 16:22:55
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answer #1
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answered by Matthew 2
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Here is your natural solution. Take a pair of pliers and put them in boiling water for 30 minutes - get a friend who has strong hands and point out the tooth with the brown spot. Drink a couple of shots of whisky and then have him pull the rooting tooth out. That is the natural way - of course we could try a dentist other wise you will suffer horrible pain as the infection goes down into you jaw.
2006-11-25 16:35:06
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I definitely feel for you; dentists today are not only expensive and hard to contact when you need them, but they also hide the secret that dentistry is not at all a skilled job! You can easily and safely perform self-dentistry on your cavity. Start off in front of a good mirror in a room with good lighting. You will need a pair of sterilized pliers, rubbing alcohol, and plenty of gauze to mop up the blood. Oops! I forgot; you need plenty of hard alcohol as well (as an old-fashioned anaesthetic). Simply get into a comfortable position, and, making sure you are grabbing the right tooth, give one sharp, confident yank and the tooth will be out! Use gauze and apply rubbing alcohol if you feel an excessive amount of pain. Ta-da! You are done, and it was free!
[courtesy of sarcasm international-- we don't actually recommend the above procedure]
2006-11-25 15:40:45
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answer #3
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answered by flactate 1
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Dude. You are going to be one unhappy cat if you don't go to the dentist. You have perfectly described a cavity. Like rust, tooth decay never sleeps. There is no natural solution as nature is only going to make this tooth worse until you either see a dentist to fix it or end up with a killer toothache. Don't wait for the inevitable to happen.
2006-11-25 18:03:56
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answer #4
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answered by Picture Taker 7
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Honestly.... All the people who only want "natural" solutions should avoid food with ANY processing.... Also, no synthetic clothes....oh, and computers? probably not so natural.
But ok, let's assume you can't go to the ONE PROFESSIONAL who can tell you in five min or less what your problem is, how severe and how (if at all) to fix it.
A lot of times people get staining in the grooves of their teeth. if the staining is soft or sticky then it's a cavity and needs a filling.
(if you'd like to to use some kind of clay or natural substance, go for it, but i'd recommend a white filling - the estrogen in them is not dangerous, but most folks feel that's preferable to the not-at-all harmful mercury in the silver fillings!)
it's POSSible that this stain is harmless and it's jsut cosmetic. no one except you can probably see it, so you don't ahve to do anything.
but you won't know unless you see a dentist.
Good luck
2006-11-25 15:33:49
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answer #5
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answered by drswansondds 4
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Sounds like you have a cavity. That means that part of your tooth is rotting with a small infection. The damage cannot be reversed; teeth don't heal. You have to drill in to the tooth to remove the infection, then replace the drilled hole with a hard substance that will be there forever. A dentist must do this. There is no way to fix this without a dentist.
2006-11-25 15:29:38
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answer #6
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answered by stevejensen 4
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It might be a cavity. Or maybe a stain. You SHOULD go to a dentist. Until then, brush with a protective toothpaste and maybe a battery powered tooth brush in order to remove all the plaque. Then wash with a good mouthwash (Listerine).
2006-11-25 15:30:25
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answer #7
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answered by WILSON 3
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I don't believe that you have a cavity...but have you been brushing too hard, or have you eaten anything hard? The pain from braces tend to last longer than you expect. It'll go away in a week. Also, braces tend to make your teeth hurt at random times, and that very normal. Don't put any pressure on your teeth, the pain will stop.
2016-05-23 03:06:05
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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to tell you the truth, it has to be a cavity, I my self have had many,when I had my baby teeth, and this sounds like a cavity. Just go to a dotor, if anything the might just give you a shot fix it up, or it might just need a filling, and belive me the shots, arent as bad as doctor ones. But then again I am used to them. lol.
2006-11-25 15:41:44
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answer #9
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answered by dark_angell999@sbcglobal.net 1
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The brown spot is a cavity and there is NOTHING you can do to fix it. GO TO A DENTIST. He will have it repaired in short order and you will be worry free. GO!! Good luck. Pops
2006-11-25 15:30:09
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answer #10
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answered by Pops 6
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