Patient Guide for Vital Pulp Therapy (Keeping Your Tooth Alive)
Root Canal After-Care
Managing Pain & Tenderness
It is normal for the treated tooth and surrounding tissues to be sensitive for several days. This is an expected part of the healing process as the nerve inside your tooth recovers.
- Post-Op Soreness: The tooth may be tender to biting or cold. This is normal and should gradually improve over the next week. We recommend a scheduled regimen of 600mg of Ibuprofen for the first 1-2 days to manage inflammation.
Temporary Filling Care
We have placed a durable, permanent filling to seal the tooth and protect the vital pulp. While this restoration is strong, the underlying tooth is still recovering and is structurally compromised from the deep cavity.
- CRITICAL PRECAUTION: For the next week, and until we have made a final decision on any further treatment, you must avoid chewing anything hard or sticky on this tooth. The tooth is vulnerable to fracture during this initial healing period.
Follow-Up Plan
The procedure we have just performed is called Vital Pulp Therapy. It is a modern, evidence-based procedure with one critical goal: to avoid a root canal and keep your tooth alive.
Our Conservative Philosophy: Preserving Vitality
When a cavity gets very deep, it can get dangerously close to the “pulp”—the living nerve and blood supply inside your tooth. By using advanced biocompatible materials, we can protect the pulp and stimulate your tooth to heal itself and stay vital. Depending on the situation, we may have performed one of two techniques:
- Indirect Pulp Cap: Sealing a special medicated material over the pulp without exposing it.
- Direct Pulp Cap: Placing a special “bioceramic” material directly onto a small, clean pulp exposure to stimulate healing.
The Next Step: Assessing the Need for Final Protection
The vital pulp therapy procedure saves the nerve, and the filling we placed today permanently seals the tooth. Now, we must address the tooth’s structural integrity. A tooth that has had a very deep cavity is at a higher risk of fracturing.
The need for any further treatment depends entirely on how much healthy tooth structure remains. Our philosophy is to be as conservative as possible:
- If enough strong, healthy tooth structure is left, the permanent filling we placed today may be the final and only restoration your tooth needs.
- If the tooth has been significantly weakened, a final restoration that covers and protects the chewing surfaces (cusps)—such as a ceramic onlay or a full crown—is absolutely essential to prevent the tooth from fracturing.
We will assess the tooth’s structural needs at your follow-up appointment to determine the best long-term solution.
Frequently Asked Questions
That is the most important question. Vital pulp therapy is a highly predictable procedure, but it is not a guarantee. Success depends on the health of the nerve before the procedure and your body’s ability to heal. Think of it as giving the tooth its best and final chance to survive. The majority of cases are successful, but there is always a chance that the nerve will not recover, and you may still need a root canal in the future.
If the pulp is not able to heal, you may start to experience symptoms over the next several weeks or months. The most common signs are the development of lingering, intense pain to hot or cold, or a spontaneous, throbbing toothache. If you experience any of these symptoms, you must contact our office immediately, as it likely means a root canal is now necessary.
This is an excellent question that gets to the heart of our conservative philosophy. The answer depends entirely on how much healthy tooth structure is left. If the tooth is still strong, the filling is the best choice. However, if a back tooth has been significantly weakened, a simple filling does nothing to hold it together against chewing forces. In those cases, an onlay or crown acts like a helmet, binding the weak parts of the tooth together and preventing it from fracturing.
The first phase of treatment is done—we have removed the decay and saved the nerve. The second phase is ensuring the tooth is structurally sound for the long term. At your follow-up, we will determine if the permanent filling is sufficient on its own, or if an additional protective restoration (like an onlay or crown) is needed to prevent fracture. This final decision is a critical step in protecting the tooth you just saved.