Oral Health§

Oral care after dental work — the 30-day reset.

Fillings, crowns, extractions, gum surgery — each rewrites the rules for the next month. A short field guide.

By Wytte Editorial24 April 20263 minute readCategory · Oral Health
Gentle hands holding a soft clothPhoto: Yaroslav Shuraev / Pexels

The dentist gives you a card. No solid food for 4 hours, rinse with salt water after 24 hours. It's not enough. The next 30 days run differently depending on what was done.

After a routine filling

  • First 24 hours: Avoid chewing on the side with the new filling. Composite is hardened with UV, but full structural bond takes hours; metal amalgam needs longer.
  • Day 2–7: Sensitivity to cold is normal. Lukewarm water for everything.
  • Day 7+: Resume normal brushing. Floss carefully around the filled tooth — pull floss out sideways, not up, to avoid catching new restoration edges.
  • Month 1: Watch for "bite high" — if the new filling feels taller, return to the dentist within 2 weeks to adjust. Untreated, it cracks the opposing tooth.

After a crown

  • First 48 hours: Soft food. The crown is cemented but the cement strengthens over time.
  • First week: No flossing the crowned tooth. The temporary cement won't hold.
  • Week 2: Resume flossing carefully — slide floss out sideways, not snap it up.
  • Month 1: Watch for marginal sensitivity (around the edge of the crown). Mild = normal; sharp pain = call.

After an extraction (non-wisdom-tooth)

  • First 24 hours: No spitting (disturbs clot), no straws (suction can dislodge), no smoking.
  • Day 2–3: Salt-water rinses, gentle. Brush the rest of the mouth normally.
  • Week 1: Soft food still. Avoid the extraction site with the brush.
  • Month 1: Site heals visibly. Plan for replacement (implant, bridge, denture) within 3 months — adjacent teeth start to drift after that.

After a root canal

  • First 48 hours: Mild discomfort normal. Save chewing for the unaffected side.
  • First week: A crown is usually placed within 2–4 weeks. Avoid hard food on the treated tooth.
  • Long term: Root-canal-treated teeth are more brittle. Get the recommended crown promptly. Watch for darkening over months — internal bleaching addresses this.

After gum surgery (deep scaling, flap surgery, graft)

  • First 24 hours: Cold compress for swelling. No brushing the treated zone.
  • Week 1: Soft food. Antibiotic mouthwash if prescribed. Salt-water rinses gently.
  • Week 2: Resume brushing the treated zone with extra-soft brush.
  • Month 1+: This is when most of the healing happens. Adherence matters.

After whitening

  • First 24 hours: No coffee, no tea, no curry, no red wine.
  • Week 1: Light hand on brushing; the surface is at peak permeability.
  • Week 2: Shade stabilizes.
  • Month 1: Photograph for the honest result.

Each procedure rewrites the next 30 days. Match the routine to what was done.

Universal rules across procedures

  • Don't use whitening products on a tooth that's just had work done
  • Avoid alcohol-based mouthwash for at least 7 days
  • Don't skip the follow-up appointment
  • Take photos at week 2 and month 1; show them to the dentist if anything seems off
If pain is increasing, not decreasing

Discomfort should diminish day by day. Sharp pain after day 3, increasing dull ache, fever, persistent bleeding — these all warrant calling the dentist back, not waiting it out.

Different procedure. Different month.

Disclaimer. Editorial, not medical advice. Always follow your dentist's post-op instructions.

Disclaimer. Editorial only — not medical advice. The Wytte Journal writes for general education and brand context. If you have ongoing oral health concerns, fillings, gum recession, recent dental work, are pregnant, or are under 18, consult a registered dental professional. Wytte is not a substitute for a dental check-up.
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