Patient Guide for Root Canal Retreatment

Root Canal After-Care

Managing Pain & Tenderness

It is normal for the treated tooth and surrounding tissues to be tender for several days after your appointment. Because we are treating a tooth with a long-standing, complex issue, the post-operative soreness may be slightly more pronounced than a first-time root canal.

  • Pain Management: For the first 2-3 days, we recommend a scheduled regimen of 600mg of Ibuprofen with 500mg of Acetaminophen (Tylenol) taken together every 6 hours. This is highly effective at managing inflammation.
  • Timeline: The soreness should gradually improve each day. If your symptoms worsen or you experience significant swelling after 3-4 days, please contact our office.
  • A “flare-up” (a sudden increase in pressure or pain) is a normal, though uncommon, healing response. Continue your pain medication and call our office if you are concerned.

Temporary Filling Care

In most cases, we perform a retreatment by creating a small, conservative access opening through your existing crown or filling. This opening has been sealed with a durable temporary filling.

  • Risk to Existing Crown: Please be aware that creating an access opening carries a risk of fracturing the porcelain of an existing crown. We are extremely careful, but this is an inherent risk. If a fracture occurs, or if we find that your old crown has leaky margins that contributed to the failure, the crown will need to be replaced.
  • Be Gentle: Avoid chewing anything hard or sticky on this tooth.
  • Hygiene: You can and should brush the area gently. Floss carefully, pulling the floss out to the side rather than popping it back up.
  • If it Comes Out: If the temporary filling feels loose or comes out, please call our office promptly. It is essential to keep the underlying work sealed from bacteria.

Follow-Up Plan

A root canal retreatment is a highly complex procedure. Think of it as the “tooth ICU”—we are going in to manage a very challenging situation with the goal of saving a tooth that has already undergone a major therapy.

The Challenge: Unpredictability

Unlike a first-time root canal, a retreatment is unpredictable because we are working with a previously treated tooth. We are essentially detectives, and we cannot know for sure what we will find until we are inside. Common challenges we encounter and manage include:

  • Old, Difficult Filling Materials: Removing outdated materials like hard pastes, plastic carriers, or even metal “silver points.”
  • Previous Procedural Complications: Navigating and correcting issues from the first treatment, such as ledges, blockages, or perforations.
  • Undiscovered Anatomy or Fractures: Searching for hidden, untreated canals or microscopic cracks that may have caused the initial failure.

Our advanced technology (such as the dental microscope and 3D imaging) gives us the best possible chance to manage these issues, but the long-term success depends entirely on what we find.


The Final Restoration

Once the retreatment is complete and the tooth is comfortable, a final restoration is required to seal and protect it. This may involve placing a new filling in the access opening or, if necessary, fabricating a new crown.

Frequently Asked Questions

Scroll to Top

Open Directions In

Patient Guide for Root Canal Retreatment

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.