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I heard that there is a treatment some dentists are offering and they will completely knock you out before filling cavities,root canals etc. I am so frightened of the dentist I am willing to pay extra money for this.What is the name of this? Will insurance pay for part of it? Thanks for any info!!

2007-02-05 15:22:40 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health Dental

13 answers

The actual correct term for which you are searching is called sedation dentistry.

2007-02-05 15:30:10 · answer #1 · answered by TQTX37A 4 · 3 1

I have just had this done to have 2 teeth removed. It's done in a hospital because it is classed as an operation. As for insurance you will have to speak to them. The whole procedure took about 40 mins and then I had to stay in hospital for a couple hours to make sure I was OK. Definitely well worth it. I'm terrified of the needles that they have to give you. Knock me out cold I say. I didn't wake up with a headache at all either.

2007-02-05 15:34:51 · answer #2 · answered by biancajh 5 · 0 0

That would be general anesthesia. You'd have to contact your insurance company to see if they cover this. For minor procedures such as these, I imagine they wouldn't.

I too was very frightened; but once you are there the hardest part is over it seems like... Just remember to breath....close your eyes and try to relax. If it's a good dentist and there is a good assistant there to help you then it really isn't so bad.

Good luck!

2007-02-05 15:28:19 · answer #3 · answered by Jennybobenny 4 · 0 0

some people might do ok wakeful and persons might do extra appropriate with the sedation. The surgical treatment you describe is in all probability no longer a huge deal in itself. the superb indicator to tell how a affected person might do is to ask how worried they're. i be attentive to that feels like an oddly easy question, yet regularly people be attentive to in the lower back of their minds whilst they walk in the door which way they relatively need to bypass. I even have by no potential considered a affected person who became into worried remorseful approximately being sedated, and that i've got considered many sufferers who regretted no longer being sedated who did no longer prefer to pay for the anesthesia. How puzzling the technique is relies upon on a lot of components and it relatively is puzzling to tell in basic terms from the define. What the different man or woman wrote some root canal taken care of teeth is real. it is going to in all probability fracture into smaller products and might desire to be bumped off surgically. it is going to in all probability be much less of much to take a seat down by than a root canal nonetheless. yet another significant ingredient is your age. The older you get, the harder the bone gets and the extra fused to the bone the teeth gets. it relatively is not any longer precisely scientifically what happens yet i'm simplifying it for this answer. So what meaning is that in case you're above 30 years previous, it could take longer to extract. What the guy wrote approximately Halcion i do no longer accept as true with. Oral sedation brokers or maybe the nitrous giggling gas are no longer that powerful with extractions if the guy is relatively worried. it could take slightly of the sting off for something like a teeth cleansing, in spite of the incontrovertible fact that it won't do sufficient for somebody relatively scared. the final anestheisa or IV sedation to knock you out is relatively the powerful ingredient in case you're worried and cutting-edge technique an extraction. i will regularly tell in the 1st 2 minutes of chatting with a affected person in the event that they might do extra appropriate wakeful or asleep. i might have faith the advice of the oral wellbeing care provider doing all your surgical treatment or get yet another opinion.

2016-10-01 12:07:52 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Either general anesthesia or sedation dentistry
Usually when you are just having fillings,extractions,etc..they do not put you to sleep..unless it is an oral surgeon that requires surgery like an impacted wisdom tooth.
a dds will normally give you Novocaine..
the sedation dentistry is more expensive,but it is for people like you and me as well...lol...who are terrified !
They will use nitrous oxide which is laughing gas or the 24 hour pill which kind of puts you out for 24 hours
look for a sedation dentistry in your area. Insurance ..most cover 80% after the deductible for extractions,etc..but they normally have a max they will pay per year.
hope this helps! ♥.

2007-02-05 18:17:22 · answer #5 · answered by Bren 7 · 1 0

You are referring to general anesthesia. A lot of insurances will cover this IF IT IS PROVEN to be medically necessary. If the services being done along with it are not enough to warrant the anesthesia, then a letter of medical necessity explaining the need for this could be considered. Keep in mind, insurances do NOT consider anxiety or fear of dentistry to be medically necessary. In some cases where local anesthetic is not effective (infection etc) then it is deemed medically necessary to use general anesthesia. Your best bet would be to call your insurance company and see what your plan covers for this and what criteria must be met.

2007-02-06 11:39:39 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Try tranquilizers first unless it is for wisdom tooth extraction. If you are unconscious they have to prop your mouth open and will leave you with bruises, a sore throat and a headache. With the new drills and Novocaine a dentist usually does not hut that much and a tranquilizer will take away the fear.

2007-02-05 22:10:58 · answer #7 · answered by meg 7 · 0 0

IF THIS PERFORMED BY A QUALIFIED GENERAL DENTIST, THEN IT'S KNOWN AS UNCONSCIOUS SEDATION. THIS IS MOST OFTEN DONE WITH INTRAVENOUS DRUGS.
THE ALTERNATIVE IS ORAL CONSCIOUS SEDATION WHERE YOU'RE NOT PUT TO SLEEP BUT ARE ABLE TO UP WITH THE DENTAL WORK.

2007-02-05 16:14:53 · answer #8 · answered by Dr. Albert, DDS, (USA) 7 · 0 0

i dont know how to spell it but it is called anisteshia and insurance will pay for it just be ready to wake up with a realy bad headache.

2007-02-05 15:26:28 · answer #9 · answered by *Ruffian* 3 · 0 0

A right cross to the jaw.

2007-02-05 15:30:35 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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