Dental Emergency

Cracked Tooth in Duncanville, TX

A cracked tooth can be invisible to the eye but cause real pain. Early diagnosis is everything — a crack treated today can save you from losing the tooth tomorrow. Call Minty Smiles.

AvailabilitySame-day
DiagnosisOn-site tools
Walk-insWelcome
TreatmentSave the tooth
Hero photo · cracked tooth diagnosis
Recognize It

Signs of a cracked tooth.

Cracked tooth syndrome is notoriously difficult to self-diagnose. The symptoms are often intermittent and hard to pin down — which is exactly why so many people wait too long to seek care.

01

Sharp pain when biting that disappears quickly

The signature symptom of cracked tooth syndrome. You bite down, feel a sharp jolt of pain, release pressure, and the pain vanishes almost immediately. This pattern often points to a crack.

02

Sensitivity to temperature

Hot and cold sensitivity that lingers for several seconds after the stimulus is removed suggests that the nerve inside the tooth is becoming affected — often because a crack is allowing temperature changes to reach it.

03

Pain that's hard to localize

Cracked tooth pain can be referred — meaning you feel it in a different area than where the crack is. Patients frequently cannot identify which tooth is causing the pain, making professional diagnosis essential.

04

Sensitivity to sweet foods

Unexpected sensitivity to sweets — especially when you bite into something sugary — can also indicate a crack, as dissolved sugars can penetrate the crack and irritate the dentin layer.

Classification

Not all cracks are equal.

Dental cracks range from superficial cosmetic lines to deep fractures requiring extraction. Knowing the type determines the treatment.

01 Type 01

Craze lines

Tiny, superficial cracks in the outer enamel only. Extremely common, especially in adults. They cause no pain and require no treatment — though they can be cosmetically addressed if desired.

02 Type 02

Fractured cusp

A piece of the chewing surface breaks off, usually around a large filling. Pain is typically mild. Treatment is usually a new filling or crown to restore the shape and protect the tooth. The nerve is rarely affected.

03 Type 03

Cracked tooth extending toward the root

The crack begins at the biting surface and extends downward toward — but not through — the root. This is the classic cracked tooth syndrome presentation. A crown can often save the tooth; a root canal may also be needed if the pulp is involved.

04 Type 04

Split tooth

The crack extends completely through the tooth, splitting it into two segments. The tooth cannot be saved intact. Whether any portion can be preserved depends on the location of the split. Often requires extraction.

05 Type 05

Vertical root fracture

A crack that begins in the root and extends upward. These are often asymptomatic at first and discovered incidentally on X-ray or when the surrounding bone and gum become infected. Usually requires extraction of the affected root.

Your Options

How we treat it.

Treatment depends entirely on the type and extent of the crack. The earlier we intervene, the simpler and less expensive the treatment.

01

Bonding for minor surface cracks

For small chips and craze lines, dental bonding reshapes and seals the surface with minimal tooth removal in a single visit. Learn about dental bonding.

02

Crown for fractured cusps and moderate cracks

A dental crown encases the entire visible portion of the tooth, holding the crack together and preventing it from propagating further. It also restores full chewing function. Learn about dental crowns.

03

Root canal + crown for deeper cracks

When the crack reaches the pulp chamber, the nerve tissue becomes inflamed or infected. A root canal removes this tissue; a crown then protects the remaining tooth. Learn about root canal therapy.

04

Extraction for split or unsalvageable teeth

When the crack has propagated too far — through the root or deep below the gumline — extraction is the only option. We'll discuss tooth replacement options, including dental implants, once healing is complete.

Cracks don't heal. They grow. A crown placed today can prevent a root canal or extraction tomorrow — early treatment is always the more conservative and less expensive path.

Questions

The things everyone asks.

Can a cracked tooth heal on its own?
No. Unlike bone, tooth enamel cannot regenerate. A crack will not heal itself — and in most cases it will worsen over time, especially under the pressure of chewing. Early treatment stops the crack from propagating deeper toward the root. The longer you wait, the more complicated and costly the treatment.
How do you diagnose a crack you can't see?
Cracked tooth syndrome is one of dentistry's most challenging diagnostic puzzles. We use several tools: a focused examination, probing the tooth, biting on a special stick to reproduce the pain, transillumination (shining a light through the tooth), staining with disclosing dye, and magnification. X-rays rarely show cracks directly but reveal secondary signs. In some cases, the only confirmation comes by removing a crown and inspecting the tooth directly.
Will I need a root canal for a cracked tooth?
It depends on how deep the crack goes. Cracks that extend to the pulp — the inner chamber containing the nerve — require a root canal to remove the inflamed tissue before a crown is placed. Surface cracks and fractured cusps may be treatable with bonding or a crown alone, without a root canal.
Is a cracked tooth always a dental emergency?
It depends on the type and severity. Hairline craze lines on the surface enamel are common and rarely urgent. A fractured cusp or a crack causing pain when biting or temperature sensitivity needs to be seen as soon as possible. A tooth that has split is an emergency. If you're experiencing pain, call us the same day.
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Think you have a cracked tooth?

Get diagnosed today. Early treatment saves teeth.

(469) 759-6964