Dental emergency

Same-Day Emergency Dentist — Glendale, AZ

What to do right now

1. Call Glisten Dental Glendale at 480-630-4446 — before 1:00 PM Mon-Thu almost always means afternoon slot.
2. ER instead if: difficulty breathing/swallowing, facial swelling toward eye or neck, fever over 101°F, uncontrolled bleeding, head injury.
3. Bring: photo ID, insurance card, medication list (especially blood thinners), prior X-rays if available.
4. Bring broken tooth fragments rinsed and stored in milk or saliva.
5. Give the front desk 30 minutes of phone lead time when possible — shortens your wait dramatically.
6. Ibuprofen 400-600mg + acetaminophen 500-1000mg combo for pain en route.
7. Cold compress on outside of cheek for swelling.
8. Do NOT take aspirin if active bleeding. Do NOT apply heat to the face.
9. Patients on blood thinners — call us immediately, don't self-manage.

Need a same-day dentist in Glendale? Call 480-630-4446 now. Glisten Dental Glendale holds emergency appointment slots every business day specifically for patients with acute dental problems — whether you’re an existing patient or a first-time emergency walk-in.

What “same-day” actually means at Glisten Dental Glendale

Same-day is a commitment, not a marketing slogan. We block protected slots in every day’s schedule for urgent care. If you call before 1:00 PM Monday–Thursday, you can almost always be seen the same afternoon. Friday mornings we usually have open urgent slots. Call Saturday, we route you to Monday morning’s first slots or to our after-hours protocol.

The constraint is capacity, not willingness. On a busy Monday we may have to triage hardest first and offer you early the following morning instead of that afternoon. We’ll tell you exactly when we can see you when you call — no wasted trips, no wait-and-hope.

What we treat same-day

  • Severe toothache — sudden, throbbing, waking you up, radiating to your ear or jaw. Evaluate same-day, root canal or extraction as indicated (see our severe toothache page)
  • Dental abscess — localized swelling with pain or drainage. Drainage and antibiotics same-day (see abscess page)
  • Knocked-out permanent tooth — reimplantation window is 30-60 minutes. Drop everything and come in (see knocked-out tooth page)
  • Fractured tooth with exposed pulp — needs pulp protection immediately to avoid root canal becoming unavoidable
  • Lost filling causing pain or sensitivity — temporary repair or permanent replacement same-day when possible (see lost filling page)
  • Wisdom tooth infection with localized swelling — irrigation and antibiotics same-day, extraction scheduled after infection clears (see wisdom tooth pain page)
  • Broken denture or partial — emergency reline or adjustment so you can eat and work
  • Post-operative complications — dry socket after recent extraction, crown that came off, temporary that debonded
  • Uncontrolled dental bleeding — after extraction or trauma, not stopping with 15-20 minutes of pressure

What we schedule within 24-48 hours (urgent but not same-day)

  • Mild chip without pain or pulp exposure
  • Cosmetic fractures on front teeth without bleeding
  • Sensitivity without constant pain
  • Loose crown or filling without pain
  • Gum irritation or localized soreness
  • Chronic jaw pain or TMD flare-ups

When to skip us and go to an ER

  • Difficulty breathing or swallowing from facial swelling
  • Facial swelling extending toward the eye or down the neck
  • High fever (over 101°F) with dental infection
  • Uncontrollable bleeding from facial trauma
  • Suspected jaw fracture after impact
  • Loss of consciousness or significant head injury alongside dental injury

Emergency rooms cannot perform dental procedures — they can only manage airway, administer antibiotics, and provide pain control. But for the conditions above, those are the exact interventions you need first. Come to us once the systemic emergency is stabilized.

First-time patient emergency visits

You do not need to be an existing Glisten Dental Glendale patient to be seen same-day. First-time emergency patients are welcome. Bring:

  • Photo ID and insurance card (or be prepared to pay out of pocket)
  • Current medication list — especially blood thinners, osteoporosis medications, and any recent antibiotics
  • Prior dental X-rays if you have them or can obtain them quickly from your previous dentist
  • The fragment of any broken tooth (rinsed, stored in milk or saliva)

Call ahead so we can prepare the right room and anesthesia. Same-day emergencies are easier for everyone when the front desk has 30 minutes of lead time.

Cost of a same-day emergency visit

Emergency exam with X-ray at Glisten Dental Glendale: $150-$250 before treatment. Most dental insurance plans cover emergency visits at 80-100% after deductible is met. Treatment costs vary by diagnosis — we give you a specific quote before starting any work. CareCredit and in-office payment plans available for patients without insurance.

We will not surprise you at checkout. The front desk walks through estimated insurance coverage and patient responsibility before the doctor begins treatment. This is non-negotiable for us.

Call first, then come in

Always call before arriving. Walk-ins are welcomed (see our walk-in page) but a call ahead lets us triage over the phone, tell you which entrance to use, ensure anesthesia is ready, and cut your wait from 90 minutes down to 15. It’s also faster for you to hear “come in at 3pm” than to drive here and hear the same answer.

Call 480-630-4446. Same-day emergency care in Glendale is a promise we keep.

Frequently asked questions

Can I really be seen the same day if I call in the morning?
Yes, in almost every case. Glisten Dental Glendale protects emergency slots in every business day's schedule specifically for acute cases. Call before 1:00 PM Monday through Thursday and you'll almost always get seen that afternoon. The exception is extremely busy days when we triage hardest first — you'd be told exactly when we can see you during the call, not sent away hoping for a cancellation.
Do I have to be an existing patient to be seen same-day?
No. First-time emergency patients are welcome at Glisten Dental Glendale. Bring photo ID, insurance card, your current medication list (especially blood thinners), and any recent dental X-rays if you can obtain them. After the emergency visit, we invite you to become a regular patient — or continue with your previous dentist, whatever works best for you. No obligation, no pressure.
What does an emergency dental visit cost?
Exam with X-ray: $150-$250 at Glisten Dental Glendale. Treatment cost depends on diagnosis — a filling runs $200-$450, a root canal $1,000-$1,800, an extraction $200-$500, a crown $900-$1,800. Most dental insurance plans cover emergency exams at 80-100% and treatment at 50-80% after deductible. We verify your specific coverage and quote out-of-pocket before starting any treatment. CareCredit and in-office payment plans are available for patients without insurance.
Will you prescribe me antibiotics over the phone so I can wait to come in?
Rarely, and only for existing patients with a clear diagnosis from a recent visit. Prescribing antibiotics without a clinical exam is both bad medicine and legally questionable in most cases — the underlying infection needs identification, not just suppression. If you're in pain and calling us, the best path is to get seen same-day rather than medicate a problem we haven't diagnosed. Antibiotics are a bridge to treatment, not a replacement for it.
What if my emergency happens on the weekend?
Saturday calls route to our after-hours voicemail with clear instructions. For life-threatening emergencies (airway swelling, severe trauma, signs of spreading infection), go to an emergency room — they can stabilize you and we'll take over Monday morning. For manageable urgent issues, we schedule you for our earliest Monday slot, typically 8:00-8:30 AM. See our after-hours page for detailed guidance.
I'm pregnant / nursing / on blood thinners. Can you still treat me same-day?
Yes. Pregnancy, nursing, and blood thinners are not barriers to emergency dental care — they just change the protocol. Pregnancy: we avoid certain medications and routine X-rays but emergency X-rays with lead shielding are safe in any trimester when clinically needed. Nursing: we choose medications compatible with breastfeeding. Blood thinners (warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban, clopidogrel, aspirin): we may adjust technique or coordinate with your physician but rarely need to stop the medication for routine dental emergencies. Tell us up front and we'll plan accordingly.
How fast should I be seen for a knocked-out tooth?
Within 30-60 minutes for the best chance of successful reimplantation. Rinse the tooth gently (don't scrub), place it in milk or under your tongue or in a tooth-preservation solution if available, and call us en route. Do not touch the root surface — hold it by the crown only. Time is everything for this one. If you're more than 60 minutes out or the tooth is badly damaged, replacement options (implant, bridge) are still excellent — don't delay out of panic. See our knocked-out tooth page for detailed first-aid.