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Tooth Pain treatment in bryn mawr

Why Does Tooth Pain Get Worse at Night? Common Causes Explained 

Tooth pain that intensifies at night is one of the most telling signs that something in your mouth needs professional attention soon. At Dillon Family Dentistry in Bryn Mawr, PA, Dr. David Dillon regularly sees Main Line patients who spend nights in significant discomfort because they were unsure whether their toothache was serious enough to call about. The answer, in almost every case, is yes: nighttime tooth pain has specific, diagnosable causes ranging from cavities and cracked teeth to dental abscesses and impacted wisdom teeth, and all of them respond far better to early treatment than to waiting.

There is a reason so many calls to dental offices happen first thing Monday morning. Patients spent the weekend managing tooth pain that started as a mild ache on Friday and turned into something they could not sleep through by Sunday night. I hear this story regularly at Dillon Family Dentistry on East Lancaster Avenue here in Bryn Mawr, and my response is always the same: nighttime tooth pain is not bad luck. It is biology, and it is your body asking for dental care.

This guide is my attempt to give you what you actually need at 1 a.m. when you cannot figure out why your tooth is throbbing and what to do about it. We are going to go through the science of why tooth pain follows this nighttime pattern, walk through every major cause from cavities and abscesses to wisdom teeth and gum disease, and cover both what you can do right now for relief and when you need to call us the next morning.

Why Does Tooth Pain Get Worse at Night? The Three-Part Answer

Most patients assume their tooth is getting worse when the pain spikes at night. Usually, the tooth itself has not changed much from afternoon to midnight. What has changed is your body’s relationship to that pain. Three things happen at night that amplify dental discomfort:

Blood Pools in the Head When You Lie Flat

Gravity is working for you all day. While upright, blood flows away from your head, and the pressure in your facial tissues stays relatively low. The moment you lie down, that changes. Blood redistributes upward. If a tooth is inflamed, whether from decay, a crack, an infection, or gum disease, the increased vascular pressure in that tissue makes every heartbeat feel like a throb. This is not imagination. It is the same mechanism that makes headaches worse when you lie down.

Cortisol Drops to Its Lowest Point

Cortisol is your body’s primary anti-inflammatory hormone, and it follows a very predictable daily rhythm: it peaks in the morning and reaches its lowest concentration between midnight and 3 a.m. During the day, cortisol partially suppresses the inflammatory response in a compromised tooth. Overnight, without that suppression, the inflammation is unchecked. Pain that was a manageable 4 out of 10 at noon can become a 7 or 8 by 2 a.m. for no other reason than cortisol biology.

No Distractions Means Full Attention on Pain

Your brain has a finite amount of attention to distribute. During the day, work, conversations, screens, movement, and social interaction all compete with pain signals for that attention. At night, in a dark, quiet room with nothing demanding your focus, your nervous system gives the tooth pain its full attention. Neurologically, the pain has not gotten worse. It has gotten louder.

Understanding these three mechanisms is genuinely useful because it tells you something important: if tooth pain is disrupting your sleep, the underlying cause is significant enough to have been generating a meaningful pain signal all day. You were just too busy to notice.

Seven Common Causes of Tooth Pain That Get Worse at Night

Nighttime tooth pain has a specific, diagnosable source in virtually every case. Here are the seven most common ones I see at my Bryn Mawr practice:

1. Cavities That Have Reached the Dentin or Pulp

A cavity in the outer enamel layer usually causes no pain at all. By the time decay has worked through the enamel and into the dentin, the middle layer of the tooth, you will start noticing sensitivity to sweets and temperature. When decay reaches the pulp, the nerve-rich inner chamber, the pain becomes constant, severe, and follows the classic nighttime pattern.

The frustrating reality is that many patients do not know they have a cavity until it is already deep because early decay is symptomless. This is exactly why twice-yearly cleanings and exams matter: we catch cavities at the enamel stage, where treatment is a simple filling, rather than the pulp stage, where root canal therapy may be needed. We treat cavities for patients across the Main Line, from Haverford and Ardmore to Villanova and Rosemont.

2. Dental Abscess

An abscess is a pocket of bacterial infection that has spread beyond the tooth itself into the surrounding tissue or bone. It produces the most intense and unmistakable tooth pain most patients ever experience: constant, throbbing, severe, and worse when lying down. Abscesses do not follow the intermittent pattern of other tooth pain. They are relentless.

Associated signs of a tooth abscess include swelling of the gum, jaw, or face, a foul taste or bad smell in the mouth, a pimple-like bump on the gum near the affected tooth, extreme sensitivity to biting or pressure, and, in advanced cases, fever. A dental abscess does not resolve without professional treatment. If you have nighttime tooth pain with any of these symptoms, call us the next morning at 610-981-1997. If you also have facial swelling, fever, or difficulty swallowing, do not wait until morning; go to Bryn Mawr Hospital emergency department to be stabilized with antibiotics, then see us for definitive dental treatment.

3. Cracked or Fractured Tooth

Cracked tooth syndrome is sneaky. During the day, patients often describe it as a brief, sharp pain when biting on something specific, maybe a 2-second zing that goes away immediately. They dismiss it. Then at night, lying flat with elevated head pressure and no distractions, the same crack produces a significant, lingering ache that stops them from sleeping.

The crack allows temperature and pressure to reach the pulp in ways that an intact tooth does not, and over time, the pulp becomes inflamed and cannot recover. Treatment depends on how deep the crack goes: a crown alone works for shallower fractures, while a root canal followed by a crown is needed if the pulp is involved. If you have been having episodic sharp tooth pain that nobody has been able to diagnose, come see us at our Bryn Mawr dental office. Cracked tooth diagnosis is part clinical art, and we have extensive experience with it.

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4. Wisdom Tooth Pain at Night

Wisdom teeth are the last molars to erupt, typically between ages 17 and 25, and they almost always cause their most disruptive symptoms at night. There are two primary reasons. First, impacted wisdom teeth press against the adjacent molar or jawbone and generate a deep pressure-type pain that follows the positional amplification pattern. Second, partially erupted wisdom teeth create a flap of gum tissue over the partially emerged crown, a perfect trap for food and bacteria that frequently become infected. This condition, called pericoronitis, causes significant throbbing pain that is markedly worse when lying down.

Wisdom tooth pain at night that is accompanied by swelling, difficulty opening your mouth, or swollen glands in the neck is a sign of active infection that needs prompt attention. For most patients, the long-term solution is extraction, which we discuss in full at our consultation appointments.

5. Gum Disease and Periodontal Infection

Advanced gum disease creates pockets of chronic bacterial infection around tooth roots. Patients with periodontitis often describe a dull, deep ache that is hard to localize to a single tooth, swollen or receding gumline, and bleeding when brushing. This pain follows the nighttime pattern because, like all oral infections, it is amplified by positional blood pressure changes and the overnight cortisol drop.

Gum disease that is causing nighttime pain has typically reached a stage where a professional cleaning alone is not enough. Scaling and root planing, our deep cleaning procedure, removes bacteria from below the gum line and allows tissue to heal. We treat family dental patients across the Main Line with a conservative, least-invasive periodontal care approach.

6. Bruxism: Teeth Grinding While You Sleep

Bruxism is the habit of grinding or clenching teeth, and a significant portion of people who do it are entirely unaware because it happens during sleep. The signs I look for at exams include flattened chewing surfaces, small fracture lines in the enamel, and worn-down tooth edges. Patients with bruxism often report waking up with a sore jaw, tension headaches at the temples, and generalized tooth sensitivity.

The direct nighttime pain from bruxism comes from the stress it places on the periodontal ligament, the tissue anchoring teeth in the jawbone. That ligament becomes inflamed from repeated grinding and produces a diffuse achiness across multiple teeth. A custom night guard fabricated at our Bryn Mawr office is the most effective and conservative solution. It is also important to know that bruxism dramatically accelerates the development of cracked teeth. Learn more about our sleep apnea and sleep-related dental treatment options.

7. Sinus Pressure Referring to Upper Teeth

The maxillary sinuses sit directly above the roots of the upper back molars and second premolars. When those sinuses become inflamed from allergies, a cold, or a sinus infection, the pressure radiates down and produces what feels exactly like a toothache in the upper back teeth. This sinus-referred pain is more common than most people realize and is worth considering when multiple upper teeth hurt simultaneously without an obvious dental cause.

How to tell the difference: sinus tooth pain usually affects several teeth at once rather than one specific tooth, tends to change when you move positions (worse leaning forward, sometimes better standing), and is accompanied by other sinus symptoms like congestion, pressure behind the eyes, or post-nasal drip. A dental exam helps us rule out a true tooth cause so you know whether to see your dentist or your physician.

Dental Pain Relief at Night: What To Do Before You Reach the Dentist

These steps will not fix the underlying problem, but they can make the difference between a manageable night and a miserable one:

  1. Elevate your head. Stack extra pillows or sleep in a recliner. Reducing the blood pressure increase in your head is the single most effective positional relief for nighttime tooth pain.
  2. Take ibuprofen as directed. Ibuprofen is preferred over acetaminophen for tooth pain because it addresses both pain and the underlying inflammation. Take it with food and follow the package dosing guidelines.
  3. Cold compress on the cheek. Apply an ice pack wrapped in a cloth to the outside of your face near the sore tooth for 15-to-20-minute intervals. Cold reduces inflammation and provides numbing.
  4. Warm saltwater rinse. Dissolve a half teaspoon of salt in eight ounces of warm water and swish gently. Saltwater is mildly antibacterial and soothing to inflamed gum tissue.
  5. Keep the tooth away from extreme temperatures. Avoid very hot or very cold food and drinks, both of which aggravate an inflamed nerve significantly.
  6. Do not bite on the sore tooth. Chewing on a compromised tooth risks deepening a crack or aggravating an inflamed pulp.

One thing I want to address directly: clove oil. You may have read about applying clove oil to a sore tooth at home. Eugenol, the active compound in clove oil, does have mild anesthetic properties and is used in some professional dental preparations. Applied incorrectly or in too high a concentration at home, it can burn and irritate the soft tissue. If you use it, dilute it heavily with olive or coconut oil and apply it only to the tooth itself, not the gum tissue.

When Tooth Pain at Night Is a Dental Emergency

There is tooth pain that needs a morning appointment and tooth pain that needs attention tonight. Here is how to tell the difference:

Go to the emergency room or call 610-981-1997 if tooth pain is accompanied by:

  1. Visible swelling of the face, jaw, or neck that is spreading or getting worse
  2. Difficulty swallowing or breathing
  3. Fever above 101 degrees Fahrenheit
  4. Inability to open your mouth fully
  5. Swollen lymph nodes under the jaw, combined with tooth pain and fever

These signs indicate that a dental infection has spread or is spreading into the deeper soft tissue spaces of the face and neck. This can become life-threatening. Bryn Mawr Hospital on South Bryn Mawr Avenue is the appropriate emergency facility for our area. The emergency department can administer IV antibiotics and pain management to stabilize you until you can receive definitive dental treatment.

For all other nighttime tooth pain, including pain that disrupts sleep, does not respond to ibuprofen, or has been present for more than 24 hours, call our office at 610-981-1997 first thing in the morning. We do our best to see urgent tooth pain patients the same day.

How We Treat Nighttime Tooth Pain at Dillon Family Dentistry

When you come in after a night of tooth pain, here is the structured process we use to identify and treat the source:

Step 1: Diagnosis

We perform a targeted clinical exam that includes probing, percussion, and palpation tests, thermal sensitivity testing, bite tests, and digital periapical and bitewing X-rays. For suspected cracks, we may also use transillumination. We do not guess. Every treatment decision is based on a clear diagnosis that we explain to you before touching anything.

Step 2: Emergency Pain Relief

If you are in significant pain, our first priority is to get you comfortable. Depending on the source, this may mean opening a tooth to relieve pressure, removing infected tissue, administering antibiotics, or other targeted measures to eliminate the acute problem before addressing restoration.

Step 3: Definitive Treatment

After you are no longer in pain, we will discuss the reason for your condition. If you have a cavity, we will extract the decaying portion of your tooth and fill it in with a composite filling or use a crown for larger cavities. If there is an issue with the pulp inside your teeth, we will do a root canal. If you have an abscess, we will drain the infection and identify the source of the infection. If you have a cracked tooth, we will provide a crown to restore it or, if the crack is severe, discuss extraction and replacement. If you have gum disease, we will give you a periodontal treatment plan; the first step will be to scale your teeth thoroughly.

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We also provide dental implants and crowns for patients who ultimately need tooth replacement, and Invisalign treatment for patients who want to address bite irregularities that contribute to grinding and cracking.

A Note on Teeth Whitening and Tooth Sensitivity at Night

Patients sometimes ask whether their nighttime tooth sensitivity is related to teeth whitening. The answer is: it can be, and it is a different kind of problem than the structural tooth pain I have been describing above.

Whitening agents that contain peroxide will open up tiny, microscopic passageways in your tooth’s enamel, allowing sensitivity to be felt. The sensitivity from whitening products usually has been described to feel as if a “zinging, electric, and shooting” type of pain and comes in a “wave” pattern as opposed to continuously throbbing; it is indeed real and occurs due to the fact that you have an open pathway to the nerve portion of your tooth, but this type of sensitivity resolves after a time period of 24 to 48 hours after stopping the use of the whitening agent.

If you are whitening your teeth at home and are feeling significant nighttime sensitivity from the whitening product, I would recommend that you stop using the whitening product, begin using a sensitivity relief toothpaste (potassium nitrate or stannous fluoride), and do not consume extremely hot or cold foods for approximately 1 to 2 days. If the sensitivity continues for more than 48 hours, or if your sensitivity changes from the sharp, zingy pain to a constant throbbing pain, the new symptom(s) you are experiencing are now another underlying potential tooth issue that was not caused by whitening, but rather may have been displayed by the use of the whitening product. Please come see us!

Preventing Tooth Pain Before It Keeps You Up Again

Every one of the causes I described above is either preventable or, at a minimum, dramatically more manageable when caught early. Here is what consistent preventive care looks like at our East Lancaster Avenue office:

  1. Twice-yearly cleanings and exams. We check for early decay, early cracks, gum disease progression, and bite problems at every visit. These are the issues that become 2 a.m. tooth pain emergencies when left unattended.
  2. Custom night guard for grinders. If you wake up with jaw soreness or I see wear patterns at your exam, a night guard should be part of your routine. It protects against both bruxism pain and crack formation.
  3. Address sensitivity when it starts. A tooth that responds more sharply to cold than it used to, or that gives a brief ache when you bite, is telling you something. Do not wait for it to become a nighttime problem.
  4. Treat cavities while they are small. A cavity at the enamel level is a 30-minute appointment and a simple composite filling. The same cavity six months later may be a crown or a root canal. The math is straightforward.
  5. Keep up with gum care. Gum disease is silent until it is not. Patients who come in regularly let us catch periodontal issues at a stage where scaling alone can resolve them.

Tooth Pain at Night in Bryn Mawr, PA? We Are Here to Help

If you are searching for an emergency dentist in Bryn Mawr, a same-day dentist on the Main Line, or answers to why your tooth pain is keeping you up at night, the answer starts with a phone call. Call Dillon Family Dentistry at 610-981-1997 or book your appointment online. Our office is at 1084 East Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010, a short drive from patients in Haverford, Ardmore, Villanova, Wayne, Rosemont, and Radnor. We are a third-generation Main Line family dental practice, and we treat your tooth pain with the same urgency and care we would give a family member.

We accept most dental insurance plans. Visit our dental insurance page or dental financing page to understand your options. Do not spend another night staring at the ceiling. Call us.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why does tooth pain get worse at night?

Three mechanisms combine at night: lying down increases blood pressure in your head, amplifying pressure in inflamed tooth tissue; your body’s cortisol drops to its overnight low, reducing natural inflammation suppression; and without daytime distractions, your brain gives pain its full attention. Together, these turn manageable daytime aches into severe nighttime pain.

2. What causes severe tooth pain at night?

The most common causes are irreversible pulpitis, dental abscess, deep cavities reaching the nerve, cracked tooth syndrome, impacted wisdom teeth, advanced gum disease, teeth grinding at night, and occasionally sinus pressure referring to upper back teeth. A clinical exam with X-rays is the only reliable way to identify the specific cause.

3. Is tooth pain at night a dental emergency?

Pain severe enough to prevent or interrupt sleep, that does not respond to over-the-counter medication, or that lasts more than 24 hours, warrants a same-day appointment. Pain accompanied by facial swelling, fever, or trouble swallowing or breathing requires immediate emergency care. Dillon Family Dentistry in Bryn Mawr accommodates urgent tooth pain patients on short notice.

4. How do I relieve tooth pain at night at home?

Elevate your head with extra pillows, take ibuprofen as directed, apply a cold compress to your cheek, and rinse gently with warm saltwater. Avoid hot or cold food and drinks. These are temporary measures only. The underlying cause needs professional treatment.

5. What are the symptoms of a tooth abscess at night?

A dental abscess produces severe, constant, throbbing pain that worsens lying down, along with gum or facial swelling, a bad taste or odor in the mouth, a pimple-like bump on the gum, extreme pressure sensitivity, and sometimes fever. An abscess requires prompt dental treatment and does not resolve on its own.

6. Why does a cavity hurt more at night?

A cavity causes more nighttime pain because lying flat increases blood pressure in the inflamed tooth tissue, and overnight, cortisol drops remove the body’s natural pain suppression. The deeper the decay, the closer it is to the nerve, and the more pronounced this nighttime amplification effect becomes.

7. Why is wisdom tooth pain worse at night?

Wisdom tooth pain intensifies at night because positional blood pressure changes amplify the pressure around an impacted or erupting tooth. Partially erupted wisdom teeth that have developed pericoronitis, an infection in the overlying gum flap, are especially prone to severe throbbing nighttime pain.

8. When should I see a dentist for tooth pain at night?

Call your dentist the same morning or same day if tooth pain disrupts your sleep, does not respond to over-the-counter pain relief, has been present more than a day, or keeps recurring. Dillon Family Dentistry in Bryn Mawr makes every effort to see urgent tooth pain patients the same day.

9. Can tooth pain at night be caused by grinding?

Yes. Bruxism inflames the periodontal ligament and can cause diffuse nighttime and morning tooth aching across multiple teeth. It also accelerates crack formation, which produces its own nighttime pain pattern. A custom night guard fabricated at our Bryn Mawr office is the most effective treatment.

10. Does teeth whitening cause tooth pain at night?

Whitening can cause temporary nighttime sensitivity, typically zingy and intermittent rather than constant and throbbing. This usually resolves within 24 to 48 hours of stopping whitening. Persistent throbbing pain after whitening is not a whitening side effect. It is an underlying tooth problem that needs evaluation. Visit our teeth whitening page for more on managing whitening-related sensitivity.

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David Dillon

Dr. David M. Dillon, DMD Dr. David M. Dillon is a dedicated dentist with a passion for delivering compassionate care and staying at the forefront of modern dental advancements. A third-generation dentist, Dr. Dillon combines his family’s legacy of patient-centered care with cutting-edge techniques in restorative and cosmetic dentistry, including dental implants, veneers, Invisalign and more. He believes that informed patients make the best decisions for their health, so he takes extra time to educate each individual about their options, ensuring they feel confident and empowered throughout their dental journey. Dr. Dillon is committed to lifelong learning and regularly participates in continuing education to enhance his skills and provide the highest standard of care. Outside of the office, he serves as president of the Rotary Club of Ardmore and is very active in local and international community service; he’s also engaged in coaching local youth sports teams. With a warm, welcoming approach and genuine care for his patients, Dr. Dillon strives to create a relaxed, comfortable environment where every visit is a positive experience.