Sleeping Gas.?
How does it make you feel? Going to have my wisdom teeth removed and want to know what to expect. Will I be all wonked out afterwords..and what medication should I have on hand. thanks.
Answers:
Loopy - it will make you feel out of it and you may be nauseous and tired afterwards - dizzy too. You will be in the chair and then the doctor will put the mask on you for it and you will be talking or totally with it and then when you least expect it, you will be looking at something and just starts to get blurry maybe and you feel lightheaded and you will fall asleep. You may also laugh a lot. It is totally fine and nothing to be scared of. I like it- hahaha :o) It feels weird. You wake up a bit out of it and dizzy like I mentioned so make sure someone is with you. You will be ok =)
Your face will be a bit swollen or very swollen - varies person to person and it will hurt the next few days so make sure you rest, take the meds as advised and keep to liquid or very soft foods to avoid anything getting lodged where it should not be.
They should give you a Tylenol 3 (Tylenol with Codeine) prescription or Vicodin if you have a higher tolerance. Let them know if you have a higher tolerance but if you are young and don't take pain medication or any drugs, Tylenol 3 should be fine. That will help the pain a lot - you will get tired and maybe dizzy from that too. . You'll be alright. I got mine out too and I was sooo scared - which is a normal way to feel.
Good luck :o)
feeling funny for a while. It depends on how much the doctors give you or on your body.
May be u should see a dentist. They will be able to give u the proper advice I guess.
Your surgeon and/or dentist should provide you with all of the medication you need. Most likely you'll be given Vicodin or some other "heavy" pain killer for the first few days, and Advil or other "light" pain killer for the rest.
Since you reference "sleeping gas" rather than "laughing gas", I assume that you're going to be put under for the surgery. You will definitely need someone to take you to the surgery and back home, and to watch over you for the next 24 hours (complications from anaesthetics could kill you, however unlikely). You *definitely* will not be able to drive yourself.
These are the kinds of questions you should discuss with your oral surgeon or dentist. Every procedure is different, and they all carry some amount of risk. If there's anything you're unsure of, ask your doctor. That's what he (or she) is there for.
I've had all my wisdom teeth plus two others cut out. If they put you to sleep you won't know anything. With in seconds of putting the IV in you go to sleep, the next thing you know they're getting you up to go to recovery. It's the best rest you'll ever have. If they just use laughing gas it mostly just relaxes you.
Typically you'll be in la la land for the procedure and while your under you wont notice whats going on. And if you do you wont care.
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