My sister was saying about 40 years ago that her gums/teeth hurt for days after having teeth cleaned. I commented that sometimes mine did, too. However, I thought I had found the reason.
During PMS if I had my teeth cleaned, it hurt, and continued to hurt for a couple of days. Okay, maybe it went from pain to sensitivity. At any other time of the month, I had minimal or no problems. This had been my observation, but she said she would get appointments with this in mind.
After using the same dentist for about twenty years and dreading the throb-inducing pain shot to numb my gums, I found out what caused the pain. My new dentist gave me the shots for pain and I did not feel anything beyond the initial needle stick.
When I commented about the lack of pain, he explained it to me. When the person administering the injection pushes the med quickly into gum or skin, there is pain. This new dentist has never caused me a bit of pain.
I am not talking about the speed of pushing the needle into the skin. Fast is best there. Pushing the med into gum or skin slowly is what I am talking about.
Your turn
Have you ever noticed a correlation between how fast the med is pushed into the skin and how bad it hurts? Have you noticed the correlation between PMS and having teeth cleaned?