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wisdom tooth extraction q's
| Claude | 27 Jun 2005 08:50 |
Hi,
I had my four wisdom teeth removed a few months ago. One particular tooth gave the surgeon a lot of trouble and took him a long time to remove. Since then, the side of my face that held that tooth is partially numb (sensations are dulled - I assume a sensory nerve was damaged during the surgery), but this doesn't bother me that much. What bothers me is that my mouth on that side of my face is lower than it is on the other side of my face. When making certain facial expressions this asymetry becomes more exaggerated and looks unappealing. I am going to schedule an appointment with my oral surgeon to discuss this, but I'd like to gather some information first. What could be causing this? I have a few theories:
1) Since the surgeon spent a much longer time on one side of my face than the other, the tissue on that side of my face stretched more and as a result sags more.
2) In addition to damaging a sensory nerve, the surgeon damaged a motor nerve, which would adversely affects control of the mouth.
3) No motor nerve was damaged, but mouth control is adversely affected by the numbness because there is less feedback to tell the brain the current position of the mouth.
Which of these are plausible, and which would you think is the most likely? Thanks for any info.
Claude
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