Home arrow Blog arrow Sinusitis: It's not always the tooth

the simple blog

Dr. Le's dentistry blog.


Sometimes a recent cold or flu can cause sinusitis, an inflammation of the lining of your sinus cavities.  Swelling and irritation are often symptoms.  The maxillary sinuses happen to be directly over the upper back teeth.  The swelling can bear down on the teeth, creating a dull toothache.  Sometimes the sinus literally elevates the teeth a tiny bit out of socket, creating a high bite and chewing difficulties.

If your dentist is not careful, you can end up with an unnecessary root canal treatment.  A proper diagnosis of every toothache usually includes an x-ray, cold test, percussion (tapping test), biting test, and periodontal probing (gum check).   A positive biting or tapping test during or after a recent cold or allergy event may just indicate sinusitis, not a dental problem.  If dental findings are inconsistent or inconclusive, you can be referred to your medical doctor for a consult.  We had one or two such cases last year, and possibly one this morning.  I routinely ask my patients with dull toothaches, especially on upper teeth, if they've had recent sinus infections, colds, flu, or allergies.  The best way to get correct diagnosis, as always, is to be thorough (collect a lot of data), and look at all the facts, not just the dental ones.


Comments (1)add comment

Vu Le, DDS said:

...
Recently I saw another patient (seem to get one or two every cold season) where the symptoms just didn't add up.

Dentists, if there's two or three upper back teeth in a row with pain to percussion (tapping), that's a yellow flag that it's possibly not a tooth issue. You can confirm that with pulp tests (cold/heat) and normal pocket probings. (I don't expect people to do their own pulp tests; I just know that other dentists read this blog, too)

It's imperative with upper back teeth that you tell your dentist about any recent colds, flus, allergy or asthma issues that cause your sinuses or nose to stuff up. The swelling from the maxillary sinus can sometimes impinge on the tooth roots, creating a false toothache. I'm positive people have ended up with unnecessary root canals.
 
January 25, 2010
Votes: +0

Write comment

busy

Tags: Everything About