What to do right now
1. Call Glisten Dental Studio at 480-331-4955 — most lost fillings are same-day or next-day.
2. Rinse mouth gently with warm salt water to clear the cavity.
3. OTC temporary filling (Dentemp/Refilit) is OK for 24-48 hours max.
4. DO NOT use superglue — it is cytotoxic and damages tooth pulp.
5. Avoid sticky foods and extreme hot/cold on the affected side.
6. Take ibuprofen 400-600mg for discomfort. Add acetaminophen if needed.
7. Sugarless gum can temporarily plug sharp edges if they're cutting your tongue.
Lost a filling in Gilbert? Call 480-331-4955 now. Glisten Dental Studio sees lost-filling patients the same day when our schedule allows. Same-day replacement protects the tooth from fracture and infection while the repair is still straightforward.
What happens when a filling falls out
Fillings don’t last forever. The average composite filling lasts 7 to 10 years; amalgam (silver) fillings often last 15 to 20. When one fails, three things typically happen at the same time: the filling material itself breaks or debonds, decay has often formed underneath it, and the remaining tooth structure becomes suddenly weaker. That combination is why a lost filling is time-sensitive — not emergency-room urgent, but not something to defer for weeks either.
The moment a filling leaves, a cavity opens up. Bacteria, food debris, and acid from your diet have immediate access to the inner layer of the tooth (dentin). Dentin is far softer than enamel and decays roughly eight times faster. A tooth that was stable yesterday can develop a deep new cavity within days of filling loss, and a deep new cavity means a larger restoration, a crown, or a root canal instead of the simple refill you would have otherwise needed.
How urgent is a lost filling, really?
It depends on three factors: how much tooth is left, whether you’re in pain, and how long the filling has been gone.
- No pain, small filling, same day or next day: routine urgency. Call us, we’ll get you in within 24 to 48 hours. Keep the area clean in the meantime.
- Sharp edges cutting your tongue or cheek, or food constantly packing in: urgent. Same-day if we can. Soft tissue trauma can lead to a canker sore or localized infection, and compacted food accelerates decay rapidly.
- Hot, cold, or sweet sensitivity: urgent. The dentin is exposed and the pulp may already be irritated. Delay increases the chance of needing a root canal.
- Spontaneous throbbing pain, pain that wakes you up at night, pain that stays after removing the stimulus: this is beyond a lost filling now — the nerve is likely involved. Call immediately. Same-day evaluation required. See our severe toothache emergency page for what to do in the meantime.
- Visible swelling, facial asymmetry, or fever: this is an abscess, not a lost filling. See our abscess page or go to the ER if you have difficulty breathing or swallowing.
Why DIY repairs almost always make things worse
Pharmacies sell over-the-counter temporary filling kits (Dentemp, Refilit, etc.). These are fine for 24 to 48 hours while you get to a dentist. They are not a substitute for professional care, for three reasons. First, they don’t bond to the tooth — they sit mechanically. Second, they don’t seal against bacteria; decay continues underneath. Third, patients regularly pack them too deep and trap food debris between the temporary material and the tooth, creating exactly the infection you were trying to prevent.
Superglue is worse. It is cytotoxic (cell-killing) when placed against living tissue. It can inflame the pulp, cause chemical damage to the gum, and makes the eventual professional repair much more difficult because the glue must be mechanically removed before a proper bond can be formed. We see patients in Gilbert every month who tried this — the repair is always more expensive and more invasive than it would have been the day the filling came out.
What we do at Glisten Dental Studio
Every lost-filling appointment starts the same way: a clinical exam, a new X-ray (lost fillings frequently hide recurrent decay that needs to be removed before replacement), and a candid conversation about your three options.
Option 1: Direct composite replacement. If the remaining tooth structure is strong and there’s limited new decay, we remove any recurrent caries, clean the preparation, and place a tooth-colored composite filling in a single visit. Cost typically runs $200 to $450 depending on surface count. This is the right choice when at least 60-70% of the original tooth structure is intact.
Option 2: Indirect restoration — onlay or crown. If the filling was large, if there’s a crack extending into the tooth, or if the remaining walls can’t support a direct filling, we recommend an onlay or full-coverage crown. This protects the tooth from fracture long-term. Cost: $900 to $1,800 depending on material (porcelain, zirconia, or gold). One to two visits.
Option 3: Root canal followed by crown. If the pulp is already inflamed or necrotic (usually indicated by lingering pain, swelling, or a darkening of the tooth), the nerve is saved by performing a root canal, then the tooth is crowned to protect against fracture. Total cost: $1,500 to $3,000. Two to three visits.
We walk you through which option applies to your specific tooth, what insurance will typically cover, and what the out-of-pocket cost looks like before we start any work. No surprises at checkout.
Prevention for next time
Most lost fillings are preventable. Three habits extend filling lifespan:
- Six-month cleanings. Hygienists catch marginal breakdown before it fails catastrophically. A repair at the edge of an aging filling is $50 to $150; a complete replacement with recurrent decay is $300 to $500.
- Night guard if you grind. Bruxism is the #1 cause of premature filling failure in adult patients. A custom guard costs less than a single emergency filling replacement and protects every tooth in your mouth simultaneously.
- Avoid extreme temperature contrasts. Ice cubes immediately after hot coffee, or cold water right after soup — repeated thermal cycling cracks filling margins faster than almost anything else. The tooth and the filling expand at different rates.
If you’ve lost a filling in Gilbert, call 480-331-4955. We’ll triage over the phone, get you in as soon as possible, and fix it before a small problem becomes a big one.
