# Knocked Out Tooth Houston: Emergency Guide to Save Your Tooth **Category:** DENTAL TRAUMA **By URBN Dental ✓** **Reading Time:** 8 minutes — **⚠️ TIME CRITICAL:** If your tooth just got knocked out, you have 30-60 minutes to save it. Call **(832) 979-6556** NOW while following the steps below. We’ll see you immediately. — ## KEY POINTS – Adult tooth knocked out? You have 30-60 minutes to save it – Pick up tooth by crown (white part), NOT the root – Best option: Try to reinsert tooth into socket immediately – If you can’t reinsert: Store in milk (NOT water) – Call emergency dentist immediately: (832) 979-6556 – Success rate: 90%+ if reimplanted within 30 minutes, drops rapidly after – Cost to save tooth: $600-$1,600 vs $4,000-$6,000 for implant replacement — ## What to Do Immediately After Tooth Gets Knocked Out **⏰ YOU ARE RACING THE CLOCK. EVERY MINUTE MATTERS.** ### Step 1: Find the Tooth (10 seconds) Look around the accident scene. It might be: – On the ground – In your mouth – Stuck in clothing – In blood or debris **Move fast—but don’t panic and accidentally step on it.** ### Step 2: Pick It Up Correctly (5 seconds) **✅ HOLD BY THE CROWN** (the white part you chew with) **❌ NEVER TOUCH THE ROOT** (the yellowish part that was in your gums) **Why:** The root has living cells needed for reattachment. Touching, scrubbing, or damaging the root kills these cells and the tooth can’t be saved. ### Step 3: Rinse GENTLY If Dirty (10 seconds) **If tooth is dirty:** – Hold by crown – Rinse briefly (2-3 seconds) under cold water or milk – DO NOT scrub – DO NOT use soap – DO NOT remove any tissue fragments attached to root **If tooth is clean:** – Skip this step entirely – Touching it less is better ### Step 4: Try to Reinsert the Tooth (30 seconds) **This is the SINGLE BEST thing you can do.** **How to reinsert:** 1. Position tooth correctly (curved side faces front, flat side faces back) 2. Gently push it back into the socket 3. Push until it’s at the same height as adjacent teeth 4. Hold in place by biting down gently on gauze or clean cloth 5. Keep constant light pressure **What it feels like:** – Weird and uncomfortable (normal) – Slight resistance (normal) – May feel like it’s not going in all the way (keep gentle pressure) **Don’t be squeamish. This WORKS. Dentists would rather you try and fail than not try at all.** ### Step 5: If You Can’t Reinsert, Store Properly (immediate) **Can’t get it back in? Can’t bring yourself to try?** **BEST STORAGE: Milk (whole milk, any temperature)** – Drop tooth in a cup/container of milk – Milk has similar properties to saliva – Keeps root cells alive – Don’t worry if milk gets in your mouth **SECOND BEST: Between cheek and gum** – Place tooth between your cheek and lower gum – Keep it in your mouth (saliva keeps it alive) – Be very careful not to swallow it – Good option if you don’t have milk immediately available **THIRD BEST: Saline solution** – Contact lens solution or sterile saline – Better than water, not as good as milk **❌ NEVER:** – Water (kills root cells through osmosis) – Dry paper towel or tissue (cells dry out and die) – Alcohol or mouthwash (toxic to cells) – Ice (freezes and kills cells) ### Step 6: Control Bleeding (1-2 minutes) **After dealing with tooth:** 1. Rinse mouth gently with water (spit, don’t swish forcefully) 2. Bite down on clean gauze or cloth where tooth came from 3. Apply firm, constant pressure for 10 minutes 4. Don’t keep checking—constant pressure is key **Still bleeding after 10 minutes?** – Replace gauze and apply pressure for another 10 minutes – If still bleeding heavily after 20 minutes total, call 911 ### Step 7: Call Emergency Dentist WHILE DRIVING (ongoing) **Call immediately: (832) 979-6556** **Say:** “My tooth just got knocked out [X] minutes ago. I have it [in milk/in my mouth/reinserted]. I’m on my way.” **They’ll:** – Tell you to come immediately (they’ll bump other appointments) – Confirm you’re storing tooth correctly – Give you the address of closest location – Have emergency treatment ready when you arrive **Drive yourself if possible:** – Faster than waiting for ambulance – Ambulance goes to ER (ER can’t help with teeth) – Drive fast but safely **If you can’t drive:** – Have someone drive you – Call Uber/Lyft if necessary – Don’t wait for family to pick you up if they’re 20+ minutes away — ## Timeline: How Long Do You Have? ### 0-30 Minutes: EXCELLENT CHANCE **Success rate: 90-95%** if tooth reimplanted within 30 minutes **What’s happening:** – Root cells still alive and viable – Tooth can reattach to bone – Nerve may survive (no root canal needed) **Action:** Drop everything and get to dentist. This is your best window. ### 30-60 Minutes: GOOD CHANCE **Success rate: 50-70%** if reimplanted 30-60 minutes **What’s happening:** – Root cells dying but some still viable – Tooth can reattach but nerve usually dies – Will likely need root canal later **Action:** Still worth saving. Get to dentist immediately. ### 60-120 Minutes: LOW CHANCE **Success rate: 20-30%** if reimplanted after 1 hour **What’s happening:** – Most root cells dead – Reattachment questionable – Will need root canal – May reject and need extraction later **Action:** Still try—20-30% success beats guaranteed tooth loss. ### 2+ Hours: VERY LOW CHANCE **Success rate: <10%** after 2 hours **What's happening:** – Root cells dead – Tooth may fuse to bone (ankylosis) and eventually fail – Temporary fix at best **Action:** Dentist may still try, but prepare for implant conversation. ### Already Dry for Hours? **If tooth has been dry for 2+ hours:** – Root cells are dead – Reimplantation won't work long-term – Dentist will discuss implant, bridge, or partial denture options **Don't blame yourself.** Not everyone knows the 30-60 minute rule. But now you do—and you can help others in the future. — ## What the Emergency Dentist Will Do ### Immediate Treatment (First Appointment) **1. Clean and disinfect tooth (2-3 minutes)** – Remove any dirt or debris – Soak in special solution – Prepare root surface **2. Reimplant tooth (5 minutes)** – Numb the area (local anesthesia) – Clean the socket – Gently place tooth back in socket – Position correctly **3. Splint tooth in place (10-15 minutes)** – Attach tooth to adjacent teeth with wire and composite resin – Keeps tooth stable while bone heals – Like a cast for your tooth – You'll wear splint for 1-4 weeks **4. Take X-ray** – Verify tooth is positioned correctly – Document before/after – Establish baseline for future monitoring **5. Prescribe medications** – Antibiotics (prevent infection) – Pain medication (ibuprofen usually sufficient) – Chlorhexidine mouthwash (keep area clean) **Total appointment time: 30-60 minutes** **Cost: $300-$800** (reimplantation + splint) ### Follow-Up Care (Next 6-12 Months) **Week 1-2: Remove splint** – Short appointment to take off splint – Check if tooth has stabilized – Cost: $100-$200 **Weeks 2-6: Monitor healing** – X-rays to check bone reattachment – Test tooth vitality (is nerve alive?) – Cost: $50-$150 per visit **Month 2-3: Root canal (if needed)** – 80% of reimplanted teeth need root canal eventually – Nerve died during trauma even if tooth survived – Cost: $800-$1,800 **Months 3-12: Continued monitoring** – Every 2-3 months initially – X-rays to check for root resorption (bone eating away root) – Tooth may need extraction if resorption occurs **Total cost to save tooth: $1,200-$3,000** (including root canal) **Alternative if tooth can't be saved: $4,000-$6,000** (extraction + implant + crown) — ## Knocked-Out Tooth Cost Breakdown (Houston) ### Emergency Visit and Reimplantation **Immediate care:** – Emergency exam: $100-$150 – X-rays: $50-$150 – Reimplantation: $300-$500 – Splint fabrication: $200-$500 – Medications: $30-$80 – **Total first visit: $680-$1,380** ### Follow-Up Treatment (Next 3-6 Months) **Splint removal:** $100-$200 **Follow-up exams (2-3 visits):** $150-$450 **Root canal (if needed, 80% chance):** $800-$1,800 **Final crown (if root canal done):** $1,000-$3,000 **Total to fully restore tooth: $2,730-$6,830** ### Insurance Coverage **Most dental insurance:** – Emergency exam: 80-100% covered – Reimplantation: 50-80% covered (major services) – Root canal: 50-80% covered – Crown: 50% covered – **Your out-of-pocket: $1,000-$3,500** typically **If you don't have insurance:** – CareCredit: 0% APR for 12-24 months – Payment plans available – HSA/FSA funds can be used — ## Success Factors: What Improves Your Chances ### Factors You CAN Control (80% of Success) **✅ TIME:** Get to dentist within 30 minutes (90%+ success) **✅ STORAGE:** Keep tooth moist in milk or saliva (doubles success rate vs dry storage) **✅ HANDLING:** Touch crown only, not root (prevents cell damage) **✅ DON'T SCRUB:** Leave tissue on root (those cells help reattachment) **✅ TRY TO REINSERT:** Best storage is back in your mouth ### Factors Outside Your Control (20% of Success) **Age:** Children and young adults have better success (growing bone heals faster) **Tooth type:** Front teeth do better than molars (simpler root structure) **Bone health:** Healthy bone reattaches better than weakened bone **Overall health:** Diabetics and smokers have lower success rates **Severity of impact:** Clean knock-out better than crush injury — ## Special Situations ### Child's Baby Tooth Knocked Out **Don't reimplant baby teeth.** **Why:** Baby tooth roots are being resorbed naturally. Reimplanting can: – Damage permanent tooth developing below – Fuse to bone and block permanent tooth – Cause infection **What to do:** – Call dentist for evaluation – They'll X-ray to check permanent tooth – May place spacer to hold room for permanent tooth – Permanent tooth typically comes in within 1-2 years ### Child's Permanent Tooth Knocked Out **Follow same steps as adult tooth:** – Reimplant or store in milk immediately – Get to dentist within 30-60 minutes – Success rates same as adults – More likely to need root canal (developing roots are fragile) ### Tooth Knocked Out During Sports **Immediate action:** 1. Stop play immediately 2. Have coach/trainer help find tooth 3. Someone drives you to emergency dentist (don't drive yourself if dizzy/injured) 4. Call parents while driving **Prevention for next time:** – Wear custom-fitted mouthguard ($150-$300 from dentist) – Reduces knock-out risk by 60% – Required for contact sports ### Tooth Knocked Out in Accident (Car, Fall, Assault) **If other injuries present:** – Prioritize life-threatening injuries first (call 911 if needed) – Collect tooth if safe to do so – Store properly – Tell EMTs you have knocked-out tooth (they may coordinate with trauma dentist) **If only dental injury:** – Follow standard steps – Get to emergency dentist immediately – May need police report for insurance/legal purposes — ## Frequently Asked Questions ### Can a knocked-out tooth be saved if it's been several hours? Unlikely. After 2 hours dry, root cells have died. Dentist may try reimplanting as temporary measure, but tooth typically fails within months and needs extraction/implant. ### What if I swallowed the tooth? It's gone. Can't reimplant a tooth that went through your digestive system. Call dentist to discuss replacement options (implant, bridge, partial). ### Does reimplanting hurt? Not during procedure (you're numb). Afterward, expect soreness for 2-3 days like after getting a tooth filled. Take ibuprofen as directed. ### Will the tooth look normal? Usually yes, if reimplanted quickly. May have slight color change over time. Crown can be placed if appearance is concern. ### Can I eat normally after reimplantation? Not immediately. Soft diet for 1-2 weeks while splint is on. After splint removal, gradually return to normal foods over next 2-4 weeks. ### What if the tooth falls out again? Call dentist immediately. May need to be reimplanted again or may indicate failure. Don't try to reinsert yourself—you could damage healing tissues. ### Do I need a root canal if tooth is saved? Probably. 80% of reimplanted teeth eventually need root canal because trauma kills the nerve. May not be needed immediately—dentist monitors for 2-3 months. — ## Emergency Hotline: (832) 979-6556 **Your tooth just got knocked out?** 1. Follow steps above (reinsert or store in milk) 2. Call (832) 979-6556 IMMEDIATELY 3. Drive to nearest URBN Dental location 4. We'll see you right away **15 Houston locations:** Midtown, Uptown, Katy, Pearland, Kingwood, Heights, Bellaire, and more. **We're ready when you call.** — ## Medical Disclaimer This article provides general educational information about knocked-out teeth and emergency dental care. It should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your dentist or other qualified healthcare provider immediately following dental trauma. Time-sensitive information (such as 30-60 minute window) reflects clinical guidelines, but individual success rates vary based on multiple factors including age, overall health, how tooth was stored, and how quickly treatment was obtained. If you are experiencing a medical emergency involving difficulty breathing, severe uncontrolled bleeding, loss of consciousness, or other life-threatening symptoms, call 911 immediately. **URBN Dental Compliance Statement:** URBN Dental is committed to complying with all applicable regulations set forth by the Texas State Board of Dental Examiners. Individual results may vary. Success rates mentioned reflect clinical outcomes but cannot be guaranteed. — **Last Updated:** February 27, 2026 **Article Word Count:** 2,947 words **PRIMARY KEYWORD:** knocked out tooth houston **EMERGENCY HOTLINE:** (832) 979-6556 **Target URL:** dentisthoustontx.com/knocked-out-tooth-houston/
