Dental Emergency

Tooth Abscess in Duncanville, TX

A tooth abscess is a bacterial infection that can spread beyond your mouth. Don't wait — call Minty Smiles now for same-day emergency treatment in Duncanville.

UrgencyCall immediately
RiskCan spread fast
AvailabilitySame-day
Walk-insWelcome
Hero photo · dental emergency care
Recognize It

How to know it's an abscess.

Dental abscesses don't always look obvious from the outside. These are the warning signs that should prompt an immediate call to our office.

01

Severe throbbing toothache

An abscess typically produces a persistent, throbbing pain that can be one of the most intense dental pains a person experiences. It may radiate to the jaw, neck, or ear.

02

Fever and general illness

A fever indicates your body is fighting a systemic infection. If you have a toothache and a fever, the infection has likely begun spreading beyond the tooth itself.

03

Swollen jaw or face

Visible swelling on one side of the jaw or face is a classic sign of an abscess. If the swelling is spreading toward your neck or under your chin, go to the ER immediately.

04

Foul taste or smell in the mouth

If the abscess drains on its own you may notice a sudden rush of salty, bitter-tasting fluid in your mouth. This may temporarily reduce pain but does not mean the infection is gone.

05

Difficulty opening your mouth

Trismus — the inability to fully open your mouth — can develop as surrounding muscles become inflamed. This is an escalating sign that needs same-day attention.

06

Swollen lymph nodes in the neck

Swollen, tender lymph nodes under your jaw or in your neck indicate your immune system is responding to the spreading infection — another reason to call us right away.

Understand the Risk

Why you can't wait.

A tooth abscess is not like a cavity you can monitor. It is an active infection that can escalate to a medical emergency with little warning.

Dental infections spread along anatomical pathways — from the root of the tooth through the surrounding bone, into the soft tissues of the jaw, and then toward the neck and airway. This progression can happen in days, not weeks.

Ludwig's angina is a rapidly spreading bacterial infection of the floor of the mouth that can compress the airway and become life-threatening. It most commonly originates from an untreated lower molar abscess. It is rare but entirely preventable with timely treatment.

You do not need to be experiencing severe symptoms right now for your abscess to become dangerous. An abscess that seems "manageable" today can escalate overnight.

ER

Go to the ER immediately if you have:

  • Facial or neck swelling affecting breathing or swallowing
  • Difficulty swallowing or breathing
  • Fever over 101°F alongside facial swelling
  • Swelling spreading below the jawline toward the neck

Then call us so we can coordinate your dental follow-up care.

Us

Call Minty Smiles if you have:

  • Throbbing tooth pain with localized swelling (no breathing difficulty)
  • A bad taste in your mouth from a draining abscess
  • Low-grade fever alongside tooth pain
  • Swollen lymph nodes without systemic symptoms
What We Do

How we treat it.

Treatment for a dental abscess addresses both the immediate infection and its source. Antibiotics alone are not a cure.

01 Step 01

Diagnosis and X-rays

We take targeted X-rays to determine the size and location of the abscess, whether it's periapical (at the tooth root) or periodontal (in the gum), and what structures are affected.

02 Step 02

Drain the abscess

The infected pocket is numbed and opened to allow the pus to drain. This immediately relieves the pressure and throbbing pain. Antibiotics are prescribed to address remaining infection.

03 Step 03

Root canal to remove the source

A root canal removes the infected pulp tissue inside the tooth — the actual source of the infection. This saves the tooth and prevents the infection from returning. Learn about root canal therapy.

04 Step 04

Extraction if necessary

If the tooth cannot be saved or the infection is too advanced, extraction removes the source permanently. Replacement options like implants can be discussed once healing is complete. Learn about extractions.

Antibiotics bring down swelling and slow the spread — but they don't remove the infected tissue inside the tooth. Without definitive dental treatment, the abscess comes back.

Questions

The things everyone asks.

Will the abscess go away on its own?
No. A dental abscess is a bacterial infection that will not resolve without treatment. It may appear to improve temporarily if it drains on its own, but the underlying infection remains and will worsen. Without treatment it can spread to the jaw, neck, and in rare cases the airway.
Can I take antibiotics without seeing a dentist?
Antibiotics can reduce the spread of infection and bring down swelling, but they do not cure the source of the problem. The infection originated inside the tooth or in the surrounding bone. Only dental treatment — draining the abscess, performing a root canal, or extracting the tooth — removes the source. Antibiotics alone are a temporary measure, not a cure.
How quickly can an abscess become dangerous?
An untreated abscess can spread to the jaw, neck, and airway within days. Ludwig's angina — a potentially fatal infection of the floor of the mouth — can develop from an untreated lower tooth abscess. If you have facial swelling, fever, or difficulty swallowing or breathing, go to the ER immediately and call us on your way.
What does abscess drainage feel like?
The area is numbed thoroughly before any drainage procedure. Most patients report feeling pressure but no sharp pain. Many patients feel significant relief almost immediately after the abscess is drained, as the pressure causing the throbbing pain is released. The procedure is far less uncomfortable than the abscess itself.
Related

Also relevant to you.

Treatments commonly used to address a tooth abscess and its consequences.

Don't wait on an abscess.

Call us now. Same-day emergency care in Duncanville, TX.

(469) 759-6964