See a dentist: Patients with epilepsy can trigger a seizure by being under high levels of stress, and a bad toothache can certainly cause that kind of stress. See a dentist as soon as possible to that you can get the pain addressed. If the seizures continue, see your neurologist to discuss more effective measures of controlling the epilepsy.
Answered 5/8/2019
5.5k views
See a dentist.: Dental pain is indicating the presence of a problem. See a dentist to find the problem and then fix it.
Answered 7/24/2015
5.4k views
Teamwork!: Combination care between you dentist and your neurologist is the best solution; it may involve some legwork on your part. This should include 1: solve the problem and eliminate the pain. 2: coordinate the efforts of your dentist and your neurologist to avoid this in the future by both managing and avoiding triggers.
Answered 6/14/2021
5.4k views
Team Approach: Stress can cause epilepsy, i.e. Dental pain and anxiety. It's important that your dentist and medical professional work together to come up with a treatment plan that addresses the dental pain and the epilepsy.
Answered 7/24/2015
5.2k views
See your dentist: The simple solution is to address the dental pain, if it indeed is triggering epilepsy. Don't delay in doing so. One less day of having to suffer through an episode of epilepsy is well worth you taking prompt action and see a dentist asap. Keep smiling.
Answered 11/27/2017
4.9k views
See Epileptologist: Some neurologists take advanced training and become epileptologists. These doctors neurologists specialize in the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy. See dentist for dental diagnosis and team approach treatment.
Answered 7/24/2015
2.5k views
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