Daily Mail

Ease your tooth pain with a cooling mask

- By ROGER DOBSON

AmaSk that chills the face is being used to combat toothache after dental surgery. The clear plastic mask, which moulds around the face, is being tested in an NHS trial as a way of preventing the swelling and pain that follows surgery to extract teeth.

The theory is that wearing the mask during and after the procedure cools the face and underlying gum tissue and makes it less likely to swell, bruise and bleed.

The removal of teeth, including wisdom teeth, triggers an immune system reaction that leads to inflammati­on around the site where teeth are removed.

This triggers the release of various chemicals and causes blood vessels to widen, which leads to bleeding, bruising (where blood accumulate­s under the skin) and swelling.

Patients often have pain and can’t open their mouths properly (known as trismus) for days after surgery.

The mask fits snugly across the face with cut-outs for the eyes, nose and mouth, and has tubes through which cool water is piped. It is based on research that shows cooling down tissue can reduce the activity of inflammato­ry compounds.

The idea of cold therapy has been around for decades — ice packs, cold compresses and even bags of frozen peas are used to reduce pain and swelling. a cool temperatur­e can help as it narrows blood vessels, which limits the flow of blood to the damaged area and reduces the inflammato­ry response.

The problem is that with these measures the temperatur­e cannot be carefully controlled and maintained, so their effect is limited.

The mask, however, is connected to a small bedside machine that continuall­y pumps cold water in and out of it so a temperatur­e of 15c is maintained for as long as needed across the face. Previous research suggests 15c is the ideal temperatur­e to narrow blood vessels.

as it’s a mask, it can easily be worn during the procedure, too, which means the inflammato­ry reaction can be stopped as soon as it is trig- gered. Professor Thomas Dietrich, who is leading the trial at Birmingham Dental Hospital, says: ‘The removal of wisdom teeth is arguably the most commonly performed surgical procedure worldwide.

‘If this study shows that applicatio­n of cold before and throughout the procedure is a simple way to reduce post-operative symptoms, it could benefit thousands of patients every year.’

Wisdom teeth often grow into limited space and can be wedged against existing molars — this can cause swelling, decay or gum disease, and doctors will often recommend they are extracted.

In the trial of 60 patients who are having wisdom teeth taken out, half will wear the mask during the procedure and for two hours afterwards. The remainder won’t use the mask and will have teeth extracted in the normal way. Both groups will be put under local anaestheti­c. Researcher­s will compare swelling and pain a week after the procedure.

COMMENTING on the mask, Tara Renton, a professor in oral surgery at king’s College London, says: ‘anything that maximises comfort for patients around the time of surgery is welcome.

‘Given the option, I’d provide ice packs for patients, but this isn’t something readily available. There is limited evidence that cooling the face works. One small study on facelifts found that cooling improves swelling, but not pain or bruising.’

MEANWHILE, lasers may also help reduce pain and swelling after having a tooth taken out, according to a new study by Positivo University in Brazil. Some 22 patients had two wisdom teeth removed — one with laser treatment afterwards and the second, a month later, without the laser.

The laser treatment was applied at multiple points around the mouth through a handheld device.

The results, published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Oral & maxillofac­ial Surgery, showed patients had significan­tly less pain, swelling and trismus a week after they had been given the laser therapy.

Laser light is thought to interact with tissue and help speed up the healing process.

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