Wax or no wax?

This is the place to post general questions and comments about all areas of orthodontic treatment. Before you post a question, use the forum's SEARCH tool to see if your question has already been answered!

New Members: YOU MUST MAKE A POST WITHIN 24 HOURS OF REGISTERING OR YOUR ACCOUNT WILL BE DELETED. In other words, don't sign up unless you plan to actively participate in the message board immediately. This is necessary to keep out spammers and lurkers with bad intentions. Of course, you can read most forums on the board without registering.

DO NOT POST FULL-FACE PHOTOS or personal contact information on this website. We have had problems with people re-posting members' photos on fetish websites. Please only post photos of your teeth, not your whole face. Keep your email and your personal information private. Thank you.

Moderator: bbsadmin

Post Reply
Message
Author
coriocarey
Posts: 8
Joined: Thu Jan 07, 2016 9:31 am

Wax or no wax?

#1 Post by coriocarey »

I'm approaching my 5th week of treatment. Last week I had a somewhat impromptu adjustment and moved to a stronger wire. I've also been trying to become less dependent on wax for sore spots, in hopes of my mouth toughening up a bit.

It works - and then it doesn't. I'll have a few pain-free days where I feel my mouth is healing and then it gets angry and beat up again.

Is this normal? Meaning a cycle of irritation on and off through treatment? The main source of irritation is the bracket on each of my bottom, furthest back molars.

Appreciate hearing your experience!

Candyland
Posts: 85
Joined: Wed Jun 19, 2013 4:13 pm

Re: Wax or no wax?

#2 Post by Candyland »

I've tried to use as little was as possible during my treatment so that my mouth could adjust (I really just didn't like the hassle of always reapplying it). Whenever I had a spot really bothering me I would use wax during the day when I had to talk a lot and the movement would irritate things more, and try to go without wax at night. This seemed to work really well. It gave my mouth some time to adjust to the rubbing, without things becoming really raw and developing an ulcer (which I am really prone to do).
Image

jaime
Posts: 867
Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2014 8:00 am
Location: Southeastern Michigan
Contact:

Re: Wax or no wax?

#3 Post by jaime »

For sure it's normal to have cycling pain and no pain! You're still really early in your treatment so things will move quite a bit and be painful in all kinds of places. :)

I had one spot above my left upper canine that would bother me only if I talked a lot that day...and that went on for almost a year.

Now, post-surgery, I have one spot that absolutely will not toughen up and I have to wear wax on it daily.

Try not to overthink the wax...if you're in pain, use it. Candyland's suggestion to go without it at night is good, and I do that, too. Of course, sometimes it's good to have it on at night if it's a spot that rubs while you're lying down.
SARPE: December 19, 2013
Expander out/TPA in: May 13th, 2014
Upper and lower braces: May 21, 2014
Lefort I + BSSO + sliding genioplasty: June 11, 2015
TPA out: December 17, 2015 (due to issues)
Braces off: November 28th, 2016!!!
My blog
My ArchWired thread (last updated November 29th, 2016)

User avatar
djspeece
Posts: 2099
Joined: Mon Oct 29, 2012 9:36 am
Location: North Canton, Ohio USA

Re: Wax or no wax?

#4 Post by djspeece »

I was a waxer who didn't believe in suffering. Your mouth will toughen up even if you use wax liberally!
Dan

Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional. -- Buddist saying

teeebeee
Posts: 211
Joined: Tue Feb 10, 2015 10:26 am
Location: Norfolk, UK

Re: Wax or no wax?

#5 Post by teeebeee »

wax...always the wax! :)

t XX

sirwired
Posts: 2104
Joined: Thu Oct 30, 2008 10:05 am

Re: Wax or no wax?

#6 Post by sirwired »

For myself, it was wax during the day, and Rincinol (a mouth-rinse made by GUM) at night. I figured my mouth doesn't move much at night, so the movements it DOES make would provide some "gentle" irritation to get things to toughen up without being painful.

But yes, as your teeth move, new places on your cheeks will get annoyed with it.

Post Reply