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Extreme Whitening
What You Need to Know
The first appointment for Extreme Whitening involves impressing for
your take-home trays. Trays made by another office will not have been made
using the stringent guidelines we use to ensure an ideal whitening
environment.
The next session of Extreme Whitening will start with a bleaching in
our office, which will “condition” the teeth to absorb oxygen more readily
from the bleaching gel in your At-Home bleaching trays. Do not expect a
tremendous color change from this “conditioning” first visit. Immediately
following the “conditioning” visit, At-Home trays will be worn for 14
consecutive nights. After the 14th night, the final Extreme Whitening will
be performed in our office, and will provide significant additional
whitening over what will have already been accomplished. The result will
be WOW!
If your final appointment is longer than 14 days from your first
bleaching/conditioning appointment, continue bleaching at home until your
final Extreme Whitening visit.
When you are finished with the entire Extreme Whitening process, place
any remaining bleaching gel syringes in the refrigerator to extend the
shelf-life.
Directions
Just before sleep, take one Aleve tablet (Naproxen Sodium). Aleve is an
over-the-counter medication similar to Advil (ibuprofen), but lasts seven
hours. Advil works very well also, but does not last as long for
over-night bleaching. The whitening gel and trays may cause temporary
inflammation of the teeth and gums, resulting in some soreness. Aleve and
Advil are great anti-inflammatory medicines. This is very important to
control the potential for inflammation and soreness. If necessary, you may
take 2 Aleve tablets, but be careful not to take more than 3 in a 24-hour
period. If your sensitivity exceeds what the medication can control, we
will provide a prescription for extra strength fluoride that you can place
in your trays for 5 minutes each morning (after tray removal, not
before).
You will start your bleaching immediately before sleep. If you usually
lie in bed watching television before sleep, wait until you are ready to
sleep before using your bleaching trays.
Brush your teeth immediately before each bleaching session.
It is important to brush
immediately before bleaching because protein from your saliva will coat
your teeth within minutes after brushing, and could inhibit the bleaching
agent from whitening your teeth as quickly.
This will help de-sensitize your
teeth before bleaching.
Squeeze a dab of bleaching gel into each reservoir on the inner side of
the outer walls of the trays (except in the very last molars). The gel is
thick and the trays are flexible, so the gel will cause the outer rim of
the tray to be pushed away from the gum line. After you put the tray in
you’ll need to firmly push the tray back against the teeth to establish
the seal of the tray at the gum line – this is very important.
If you’ve put too much gel in the tray, you’ll notice a significant
amount of gel oozing out from under the edge of the tray. Take a Q-Tip and
remove the excess, and next time use a little less gel. If you’ve put in
too little gel, you will see through the clear tray some large open voids
(little bubbles are OK) in the reservoirs not entirely filled with gel. If
you see this, do NOT remove the tray. There is plenty of gel in the
reservoirs to start your bleaching, but next time use a little more gel.
In the morning, after removing the trays, rinse your mouth with
luke-warm water. Cold or hot water may be slightly uncomfortable to rinse
with at that time. Clean the trays with Q-Tips under COOL running
water.
If you have reasons that prevent wearing the trays at night
(orthodontic retainers, an NTI, etc.), you may wear them during the day,
as long as you wear them at least 2 hours. Try to wear them for 2 straight
hours so you do not have to use new gel more than once a day.
What To Expect
Your teeth and gums may become sore and sensitive during the first 3-4
days of bleaching. Taking Advil every 4 hours during the day will help
this. This sensitivity usually decreases after the first 3-4 days.
You may notice that your teeth start to look “funny”. They may develop
white spots. The area of teeth near the gum may look dark (this is just
because the rest of the tooth will have become so light by comparison). Or
the color may look too opaque (chalky). Don’t fear. This will all even-out
during the final Extreme Whitening visit and the two weeks after you stop
bleaching. You may find that your lower teeth do not lighten as quickly as
your upper teeth. This is because the lower teeth are smaller, the enamel
is thinner, and the reservoirs will be smaller. Again, do not fear. The
final Extreme Whitening visit will whiten them beautifully.
Permanently Maintaining Your New White Tooth Color
All natural teeth darken with time. It’s normal. And what accelerates
this darkening is abrasives in toothpaste. Imagine you have a car with a
new shiny white paint job, and you get some oil on the paint. Water alone
won’t get off the oil. If you’re smart, you’ll use a very mild soap in
water to dissolve the oil and leave the surface shiny.
But what if you used a kitchen cleanser like Comet or Ajax? Sure, that
would get off the oil, but it would leave the paint dull. Not only would
the paint be dull, but it would accumulate dirt and stain quickly. And
after a year, the paint in this area would be darker because the surface
roughness would allow stains to soak INTO the paint itself.
Additionally, you should wear the bleaching trays while you sleep, at
least one night every four months as additional protection again
darkening. Wearing the trays one night every four months will keep your
teeth a very stable color indefinitely, however, if you want to keep them
at an even brighter white indefinitely, you may wear the bleaching trays
more often.
So, if you’ve just GOT to have your teeth absolutely the whitest they
can be indefinitely, you may bleach more often than one night every four
months – you may even choose to bleach one night every month. Follow these
instructions and your teeth should always stay white and bright.
Other Important Bits of Information
During the two weeks of at-home bleaching, stay away from staining
foods and drinks. Any food or beverage, which would permanently stain a
white shirt or blouse, could also stain your teeth. If possible, when
drinking a staining beverage, it may help to keep the beverage off the
outer surface of the teeth by carefully drinking through a straw. Smoking
should also be held to the very minimum during the bleaching process.
On your final Extreme Whitening visit, we will apply a glossy clear
protective coating on your teeth, and you will not need to avoid staining
foods after that visit.
Most people will experience mild to moderate discomfort for the first
24 to 48 hours after the last appointment. Even though we have placed a
“sealer” over your teeth, you will most likely experience “zingers” and
want something stronger for pain relief. We will prescribe something
appropriate, but please understand this will subside within 48 hours.
If possible, do not skip nights when bleaching. We find that this slows
down the whitening process.
If you have severe tetracycline or fluorosis staining, you should wear
the trays for three weeks rather than the usual two.
Store your bleaching trays safely. Keep them in the case provided. Keep
them away from heat – heat will distort them. Don’t leave them in the hot
car. Don’t put or wash them in warm or hot water. Keep them away from your
dog. Dogs seem to think that bleaching trays are chew-toys.
Most importantly, place the trays carefully in the case. When you shake
the case, you should feel that the trays are loose in the case. If they
are not, and they are being bent inside the case, this will distort and
totally destroy the trays.
We know you are going to be thrilled with your Extreme Whitening
result, but only if you are able to comply with the above instructions –
they are important. If you have any problems or questions, call us right
away.
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