Woman Goes Viral on TikTok After Dentist Visit Leaves One Side Of Her Face 'Nearly Paralyzed'

0
108

TikTok is full of cautionary tales—like the woman who claimed that pregnancy made her teeth decay and break off, or the woman who's had to get her labia cut open 26 times because of Bartholin's cysts. Now, there's a new one, and it has to do with what you should (or shouldn't) do before a dental procedure.

Vitamin C Before Dentist TikTok Vitamin C Before Dentist TikTok gone wrong after she ended up with half of her face "nearly paralyzed" from too much local anesthesia. "A little word to the wise: Don't take any vitamin C or drink any caffeine before your dentist appointment," she said. "They may have a hard time numbing you and you'll end up with half your face nearly paralyzed and still no work done 'cause you could still feel it."

In the video, which has been viewed more than 5.2 million times and has received 1.5 million likes, Bethy.Bee said that she couldn't even blink her eye after the mishap. "I have to manually shut it. Craziest thing ever," she said, adding that she'd have to visit the dentist again in three week for another attempt at the procedure.

Luckily, Bethy.Bee was fine by the next day and shared an update with her TikTok viewers, saying she had "full facial movement and automatic blinkers" by then. She also shared with viewers that she is "notoriously hard to anesthetize" and that "caffeine and vitamin C can react negatively with anesthesia."

So what’s going on here? Should you avoid vitamin C before a dental procedure?

If vitamin C is taken before local anesthesia is administered it may decrease effectiveness, but there's little scientific data to back this up, John Luther, DDS, Chief Dental Officer at Western Dental & Orthodontics, tells Health.

"I don't believe there is any credible evidence for this," agrees Charles D. Azzaretti, DDS, Program Director of Dental Anesthesiology at NYU Langone Dental Medicine. "I was not able to find anything in the scientific literature that supports the theory."

Dr. Azzaretti tells Health that some dental practice websites offer an explanation for the interference of vitamin C in the action of local anesthesia in the dental setting. They claim that lowering the pH interferes with the onset of local anesthetic and since vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is acidic, it could interfere with the onset of a local anesthetic. But Dr. Azzaretti describes this as a "false inference," since even very large doses of vitamin C after ingestion would be diluted, buffered, and excreted. "It would have no appreciable effect on the pH of the tissues associated with the dental alveolar structures (tooth sockets)," Dr. Azzaretti explains.

If taken after surgical procedures, vitamin C has many great qualities including reducing healing time, Dr. Luther adds.

RELATED: Is It Safe to Whiten Your Teeth with Activated Charcoal Toothpaste?

What about coffee? Should you avoid that?

Again, it's difficult to establish a direct effect between caffeine and the administration of local anesthesia, but Dr. Luther says many dentists feel that caffeine decreases the effectiveness of local anesthesia administered for dental procedures.

"Caffeine is known to heighten awareness and in high doses may increase a patient's anxiety or make them nervous during dental treatment, affecting the patient's experience whether or not anesthesia is given," he explains.

Dr. Luther says that taking a dietary supplement thought to have a calming effect, such as St. John's Wort, might strengthen the overall effect of local anesthetic and improve the patient experience.

RELATED: What Is Palatal Petechiae? Viral TikTok Claims Dentists Can Tell if You've Had Oral Sex

Can anything else interfere with local anesthesia before dental work?

Potentially many things, says Dr. Azzaretti, including the presence/absence of infection and inflammation, level of pain threshold (which can vary greatly between patients), patient anxiety associated with oral injections (and with dental treatment in general), different injection approaches (such as as blocks or infiltration), and the ability of the patient to metabolize local anesthetic.

Occasionally, local anesthesia may be injected in a spot that does not completely numb or block a nerve in the lower jaw, which leads to decreased effectiveness, Dr. Luther says.

"Personally, I think operator accuracy, thoroughness, and patients is the most important variable," Dr. Azzaretti says. "But I believe any of the above variables alone would be at least as significant—and probably more—in achieving effective local anesthesia than if the patient had several cups of coffee prior to the procedure."

The bottom line: If you have a cup of coffee or a glass of orange juice before you'r next cleaning, you should be totally fine. But if you're extra anxious, go ahead and skip the drinks if you want.

To get our top stories delivered to your inbox, sign up for the Healthy Living newsletter.