Louisiana urgent dental guide

Emergency dental care in Louisiana — what to do when a tooth can't wait

A practical, parent-friendly guide written for families in Louisiana looking for affordable pediatric dental care. Every clinic referenced below is a federally-funded community health center listed in our Louisiana directory.

Dental emergencies in children are scary, but the right action in the first hour can save a tooth — or a smile. Louisiana has 550 federally-funded community health centers, many of which offer same-day emergency appointments and after-hours triage lines. This guide walks through the most common pediatric dental emergencies and the exact steps to take.

Knocked-out permanent tooth (avulsion)

This is a true emergency. You have about 30 to 60 minutes to re-implant a permanent tooth before the cells on the root surface die. Steps:

  1. Find the tooth and pick it up by the crown (the white part), never the root.
  2. If it is dirty, rinse it gently with milk or saline for no more than 10 seconds. Do not scrub.
  3. If your child is calm enough, slide it back into the socket and have them bite down on a clean cloth.
  4. If you cannot reinsert it, place it in a cup of cold milk, saline, or your child's saliva. Do not use water.
  5. Get to a community health center or hospital emergency department within the hour.

Baby teeth that are knocked out should not be re-implanted because of the risk of damaging the developing permanent tooth.

Severe toothache

A throbbing toothache that lasts more than a few hours, especially with swelling or fever, almost always indicates an infection. Give children's ibuprofen at the dose marked on the bottle, place a cold compress on the cheek, and call the nearest CHC's dental triage line. Healthy Louisiana / LaCHIP covers urgent care for active dental infection at no cost. Do not place aspirin directly on the gum — it can cause a chemical burn.

Chipped or fractured tooth

Save any broken pieces in milk or saline and call the dentist the same day. Small chips can often be smoothed or bonded; large fractures that expose pink or red tissue inside the tooth require pulp therapy within 24 hours.

Oral lacerations and bleeding gums

Apply gentle, steady pressure with a clean gauze for 10 minutes. If bleeding does not stop, or if the cut is longer than 1 cm or in the lip vermillion border, head to an emergency department. Most pediatric oral lacerations heal beautifully without stitches.

Loose or displaced baby teeth

A baby tooth pushed up into the gum (intrusion) usually re-erupts on its own over weeks. A tooth pushed out of position (luxation) should be evaluated within 24 hours but is rarely a true emergency. Take a photo for the dentist and offer soft foods until the appointment.

After-hours options in Louisiana

Most large community health centers in Louisiana are part of regional emergency-call networks, with on-call pediatric dentists available evenings and weekends. If you cannot reach a dentist, hospital emergency departments will manage pain and infection but generally cannot perform definitive dental treatment. The cost is covered by LaCHIP, but a follow-up at a CHC the next day is essential.

Stocking a home dental first-aid kit

  • Children's ibuprofen and acetaminophen.
  • A small container of milk or saline rinse for tooth storage.
  • Sterile gauze pads.
  • Clove oil for temporary pain relief on a sore gum.
  • The 24-hour phone number of your nearest community health center — see our Louisiana directory.

Top cities in Louisiana for community dental care