07/05/2026
Catch cavities early before they throw a tooth party! 🦷🎉 Early detection is the key to keeping your smile happy and healthy.
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This is what happens when a small cavity is ignored.
At first, tooth decay begins silently in the enamel. No pain. No obvious warning. Just microscopic damage caused by acid-producing bacteria.
As enamel breaks down, decay moves into dentin — a softer layer that allows bacteria to travel faster and deeper. This is usually when sensitivity begins.
But once decay reaches the pulp, the situation changes completely.
The pulp is the living core of the tooth. It contains nerves and blood vessels inside a rigid, enclosed space. When bacteria invade this area, the tissue becomes inflamed. Pressure builds. Blood circulation becomes compromised.
That deep, throbbing pain many patients describe is not “just sensitivity.”
It is inflamed nerve tissue trapped inside a solid structure with no room to expand.
At this stage, a simple filling is usually no longer enough.
The infected pulp must be removed through root canal therapy — or the tooth may need extraction if it cannot be saved.
If infection progresses beyond the tooth, it can spread into surrounding bone and soft tissues, leading to more serious complications.
Early decay is small, painless, and relatively simple to treat.
Advanced decay is painful, invasive, and significantly more complex.
Cavities do not suddenly become emergencies.
They progress quietly — until the nerve becomes involved.
Early diagnosis is not cosmetic.
It is biological protection.
Disclaimer:
This post is for educational purposes only.