What to do right now
1. Call Glisten Dental Glendale at 480-630-4446 — true emergencies (visible pulp, uncontrolled bleeding, severe pain) are same-day.
2. Save the broken fragment — rinse it, store in milk or saliva, bring it in.
3. Rinse mouth gently with warm salt water to clean the fracture site.
4. Cold compress on outside of cheek for swelling (20 min on, 20 off).
5. Ibuprofen 400-600mg for pain; add acetaminophen if needed.
6. Orthodontic wax or sugarless gum can smooth sharp edges temporarily.
7. Avoid chewing on the broken side. No aspirin orally if bleeding is active.
8. Do NOT apply heat to the face or use repeated topical benzocaine.
Chipped or cracked a tooth in Glendale? Call 480-630-4446 now. Glisten Dental Glendale treats chips and cracks the same day when the pulp is at risk, and within 24-48 hours for cosmetic or stable fractures. Fast treatment is the difference between a simple bonding repair and a root canal.
Not all cracks are the same
Cracked teeth fall on a spectrum from “barely noticed it happened” to “the tooth is unsalvageable.” How we treat it depends entirely on where the crack is, how deep it goes, and whether the pulp (the nerve) is involved. Five categories cover almost everything we see.
1. Craze lines (not a real crack)
Thin, hair-like surface lines in the enamel of adult teeth. Completely normal. Often more visible in front teeth under dental-office lighting. No treatment needed. No pain. If they bother you cosmetically, tooth whitening or occasional polishing helps reduce visibility.
2. Minor enamel chip
A piece of the outer enamel layer has broken off, typically on a front tooth edge or a molar cusp. No dentin exposed, no pain to hot/cold, just a cosmetic rough edge. Treatment: composite bonding or enamel reshaping in a single 30-minute visit. Cost: $150 to $400 per tooth. Outcome: indistinguishable from uninjured teeth.
3. Fractured cusp (larger chip into dentin)
A chunk has broken off a back tooth, often where an old filling was. The yellow inner dentin is now exposed. Expect sensitivity to cold, sweets, and biting pressure. Urgent but not emergency — schedule within 24-48 hours. Treatment: usually a filling or an onlay. If the chip extended near the pulp, the nerve may need protective dressing and the tooth may require observation for pulpitis over the following weeks. Cost: $300 to $1,200.
4. Cracked tooth (the dangerous one)
This is the one we worry about most. Unlike a chipped cusp where a piece has visibly broken off, a cracked tooth has a fracture line that extends from the chewing surface downward — sometimes invisible to the naked eye. Classic symptoms: sharp pain on biting, pain that releases on opening, and temperature sensitivity that lingers. If untreated, cracks propagate deeper until they reach the pulp (causing a root canal need) or split the tooth into two pieces (causing extraction).
Treatment depends on how deep the crack extends. A shallow crack contained within the crown receives a crown to splint the pieces together and prevent propagation — cost $900 to $1,800. A crack extending into the pulp requires a root canal plus crown — $1,500 to $3,000. A crack extending below the bone level is a vertical root fracture, and the tooth is not salvageable — extraction and implant or bridge, $2,000 to $6,000 depending on replacement choice.
This is why we push patients to come in now when symptoms suggest a crack rather than wait a few weeks. A $1,200 crown today vs. a $4,000 implant next month is a meaningful difference.
5. Split tooth or vertical root fracture
The crack has fully separated the tooth into two or more pieces, or a root has fractured longitudinally. Diagnosis usually requires imaging (X-ray, sometimes CBCT). Unfortunately, these teeth can’t be saved. Treatment: extraction followed by implant, bridge, or partial denture. At Glisten Dental Glendale we discuss all three replacement paths, typical costs, and timing before anything is removed.
When a chip or crack is a true emergency
Call us immediately (not tomorrow) if:
- The tooth is severely fractured with the pink pulp tissue visible
- You’re bleeding from the fracture site and it won’t stop after 15 minutes of pressure
- Pain is severe, throbbing, or preventing sleep
- A large piece has broken off a front tooth (cosmetic urgency)
- The broken fragment is loose and you’re worried about inhaling or swallowing it
Everything else — minor chips, hairline cracks, mild sensitivity — is urgent but can usually wait 24-48 hours if we’re closed.
What to do before your appointment
Save the broken piece if you can — rinse it, put it in a small container with milk or saliva, bring it with you. We can sometimes bond the original fragment back in place for front teeth, which produces a superior cosmetic result to composite buildup alone.
Rinse your mouth with warm salt water to clean the fracture site. Avoid chewing on the broken tooth. If there’s a sharp edge cutting your tongue, a small piece of orthodontic wax or even a piece of sugarless gum can smooth it temporarily. Ibuprofen 400-600mg handles most chip-level discomfort. If pain is worse than ibuprofen can control, call us and come in immediately.
Do not apply heat to the outside of the face. Do not take aspirin orally if there’s active bleeding (it’s a blood thinner). Do not use topical benzocaine on the fracture site repeatedly — it can cause chemical irritation.
What makes Glisten Dental Glendale different for cracked teeth
Cracks are diagnostically tricky. A tooth that hurts on biting but looks normal on X-ray is easy to misdiagnose as a sinus issue, grinding symptom, or referred pain from another tooth. We use transillumination (high-intensity light through the tooth to reveal fracture lines), bite testing with a Tooth Slooth, dye staining, and cone-beam CT imaging when warranted — the full protocol for tracking down a crack that wants to stay hidden.
When we find one, we explain the specific crack classification, the specific treatment options, the realistic prognosis for each, and the out-of-pocket cost before we start. No pressure to crown a tooth that might only need a filling, and no waiting until a crack becomes unsalvageable.
If you’ve chipped or cracked a tooth in Glendale, call 480-630-4446. Bring the fragment if you have it.
