Dental emergency

After-Hours Emergency Dentist — Gilbert, AZ

What to do right now

1. Call Glisten Dental Studio at 480-331-4955 — after-hours voicemail has triage guidance and morning priority scheduling.
2. ER immediately for: difficulty breathing/swallowing, swelling toward eye or neck, fever over 101°F, suspected jaw fracture, head injury, uncontrolled bleeding past 30 min of pressure.
3. Severe toothache: ibuprofen 400-600mg + acetaminophen 500-1000mg combo every 6 hours. Cold compress. Head elevated.
4. Knocked-out tooth: store in cold milk or under tongue, do NOT scrub root, 60-minute window. Find any open emergency dental office.
5. Abscess without red flags: warm salt water rinses, cold compress (NOT heat), pain combo, sleep propped up.
6. Broken tooth: orthodontic wax over sharp edges, OTC temporary filling 24-48hr only.
7. Persistent bleeding after extraction: bite on moistened gauze or used tea bag 20-30 min continuous. Sit upright.
8. Do NOT use leftover opioid prescriptions — ibuprofen+acetaminophen combo works better for dental pain.
9. Do NOT apply aspirin to gum. Do NOT use undiluted hydrogen peroxide.
10. Overnight messages reviewed at 7:30 AM — we'll call you back with a morning slot.

Dental emergency after hours in Gilbert? Call 480-331-4955 — our after-hours voicemail walks you through exactly what to do for your specific situation. This page tells you what to do right now while you wait for us to open or until an ER can see you.

First: is this an emergency room situation?

An ER can do things Glisten Dental Studio cannot do at 2 AM: manage airway compromise, give IV antibiotics for spreading infections, and manage trauma with head or neck involvement. ERs cannot do root canals, dental extractions, or place fillings. Route accordingly.

Go to an emergency room now if you have:

  • Difficulty breathing or swallowing from facial swelling
  • Swelling spreading down the neck or up toward the eye
  • Fever over 101°F with a dental infection
  • Uncontrolled bleeding after 20-30 minutes of firm continuous pressure
  • Jaw or facial fracture suspected after trauma
  • Head injury with any loss of consciousness, even briefly
  • Severe dehydration because the pain prevents drinking
  • Any altered mental state — confusion, extreme drowsiness, difficulty staying awake

The ER will stabilize you, administer IV antibiotics and pain medication if needed, and refer you to us for definitive dental treatment the next morning. Bring the ER discharge paperwork when you come.

What to manage at home until we open

Most dental problems — even painful ones — are safely manageable overnight with the right first-aid.

Severe toothache without swelling

Ibuprofen 400-600mg plus acetaminophen 500-1000mg together every 6 hours. This combination works better than either alone and as well as many prescription opioids for dental pain. Cold compress on the outside of the face 20 minutes on, 20 off. Sleep with your head elevated — lying flat increases blood flow to the head and often worsens throbbing. Avoid chewing on the affected side. Call us at 480-331-4955 first thing in the morning.

Knocked-out permanent tooth

This is an after-hours emergency even if the pain isn’t severe. Reimplantation success drops sharply after 60 minutes. If you can find an emergency dental office that’s open — even if it’s 30 miles away — go. If you genuinely cannot, store the tooth in cold milk (best), saliva (put it under your tongue if no milk), or a tooth-preservation solution if you happen to have one. Do not let the root dry out. Do not scrub the root surface — just rinse briefly. Come to us at opening regardless. See our knocked-out tooth page for detailed steps.

Abscess with localized swelling but no red flags

Warm salt water rinse 4-6 times overnight. Ibuprofen + acetaminophen combo. Cold compress (not heat — heat accelerates infection spread). Do not attempt to lance or drain the swelling yourself. Sleep propped up on two pillows. Monitor for escalation symptoms (spreading swelling, fever, difficulty swallowing) — if they appear, head to the ER. Otherwise call us first thing in the morning — we’ll see you same-day.

Broken tooth or lost filling without bleeding

Orthodontic wax or sugarless gum over sharp edges to protect your tongue and cheek. OTC temporary filling material (Dentemp, Refilit from any 24-hour pharmacy) for 24-48 hours only if the cavity is deep. Soft diet. Save any fragments. Call us at opening — we see most of these same-day.

Persistent bleeding after recent extraction

Bite firmly on a moistened, folded, clean piece of gauze or a used tea bag (tannic acid aids clotting) for 20-30 minutes of uninterrupted pressure. Do not keep checking. Sit upright. If bleeding continues past 30 minutes of continuous pressure, call us or go to an ER. Dry socket pain typically starts 3-5 days after extraction — that’s also worth calling the after-hours line for because we can phone in an appropriate prescription or fit you in the next morning.

Lost or loose crown, no pain

Find it, keep it safe, don’t try to cement it back at 1 AM with superglue. Call first thing in the morning — usually a next-day recement is the fix, takes 20 minutes and costs $50-$150.

Medications you might already have that can help

Most homes have ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) and acetaminophen (Tylenol). The evidence-based combination protocol:

  • 400-600mg ibuprofen + 500-1000mg acetaminophen together
  • Every 6 hours around the clock for the first 24-48 hours
  • With food for ibuprofen (avoid stomach upset)
  • Do NOT exceed 3000mg acetaminophen or 2400mg ibuprofen per 24 hours
  • Do NOT use if you have kidney disease, active ulcers, or are on certain blood thinners — call us for alternatives

Leftover prescription narcotics from a prior procedure are generally not a good solution. They constipate, impair driving, and for dental pain specifically they’re less effective than the ibuprofen-acetaminophen combo. Pharmacology evidence is surprisingly clear on this.

Do not use aspirin topically on the gum — it causes chemical burns. Do not use undiluted hydrogen peroxide.

Our after-hours voicemail protocol

Call 480-331-4955 anytime. The after-hours message gives you:

  1. Immediate triage guidance by symptom
  2. ER red-flag criteria
  3. The 24-hour pharmacy closest to our office
  4. Our first available morning slots, updated daily
  5. Option to leave a message for priority triage at opening

Messages left overnight are reviewed at 7:30 AM and prioritized for the morning schedule. You don’t have to call back — we’ll call you.

Why we don’t do home visits at 11 PM

We used to. Several practices in Gilbert still advertise it. The truth: what we can do at your house at midnight is almost never more useful than what you can do for yourself with OTC pain control and a 9 AM office visit. Dental procedures require sterile equipment, specific anesthetic, imaging, and assistants — none of which travel well. For the rare exception where an in-person after-hours evaluation is genuinely necessary (usually severe trauma), an ER is faster and safer than waiting for a dentist to drive across town.

Call 480-331-4955. The after-hours line is staffed with clear triage guidance and our morning schedule is ready for you.

Frequently asked questions

What if I have a dental emergency at 2 AM?
Call Glisten Dental Studio at 480-331-4955 — our after-hours voicemail gives triage guidance by symptom and identifies red flags that require an ER. For most dental pain, OTC ibuprofen + acetaminophen combo plus cold compress handles the overnight hours safely, and we see you at opening. For airway swelling, spreading infection, severe trauma, or uncontrolled bleeding, go directly to the ER — they can stabilize you and we'll provide definitive treatment in the morning.
Can an ER fix my dental problem?
No — but that's not their job. Emergency rooms can manage airway compromise, administer IV antibiotics for spreading infections, control uncontrolled bleeding, and manage trauma. They cannot perform root canals, extractions, fillings, or crown work. An ER visit for a dental infection typically results in antibiotics and pain medication, followed by a referral to a dentist the next business day — exactly what we'd give you ourselves minus the deep dental treatment. Come to us first unless you have an ER-level red flag.
Do you have a dentist on call at night?
Not in the sense of driving to meet you at midnight. We have after-hours voicemail that routes urgent messages for next-morning priority scheduling, and our first-morning appointments are held open specifically for overnight callers. True overnight in-person dental treatment is extremely rare in modern practice because most dental emergencies are safely manageable until morning with proper guidance, and the conditions that genuinely cannot wait are ER-appropriate rather than dental-office-appropriate.
How much pain medication can I take safely?
The evidence-based combination for dental pain: ibuprofen 400-600mg + acetaminophen 500-1000mg taken together, every 6 hours, with food. Do not exceed 2400mg ibuprofen or 3000mg acetaminophen in a 24-hour period. This combination outperforms most prescription opioids for dental pain with fewer side effects. Avoid this protocol if you have kidney disease, active stomach ulcers, are on warfarin, or are pregnant in the third trimester — call us for alternatives in those cases.
What should I do if I can't stop bleeding after an extraction?
Bite firmly on a moistened, clean folded gauze pad — or a used tea bag, tannic acid aids clotting — for 20-30 minutes of uninterrupted pressure. Sit upright, not lying down. Do not keep lifting to check. If bleeding continues past 30 minutes of continuous firm pressure, call 480-331-4955 or go to an ER, particularly if you're on blood thinners. Slight oozing for up to 24 hours post-extraction is normal; steady bleeding or blood filling the mouth is not.
Is there a 24-hour emergency dentist in Gilbert?
True 24-hour in-person dental offices are extremely rare. Some practices advertise 'emergency dentist' with 24-hour phone availability that routes to next-morning scheduling — which is what we provide. Others offer after-hours appointments on a limited basis for existing patients. For a genuinely unreachable overnight emergency, go to an ER — they have dental consultants on call for true emergencies (facial trauma, deep-space infections) and will connect you to appropriate specialist care.
Can I get a prescription called in for antibiotics or pain medication overnight?
For existing Glisten Dental Studio patients with a clearly diagnosed condition from a recent visit — yes, sometimes. Leave a message with our after-hours line, we review and call in prescriptions to 24-hour pharmacies in Gilbert when clinically appropriate. For new patients or patients we haven't seen in over a year, we generally need an in-person exam before prescribing — both for accurate diagnosis and for prescribing-regulation reasons. You'd be our first call at 7:30 AM and in the chair same-day.