What’s a toothache with temple pain?

Tooth pain with pain in the temples is a symptom of an acute episode of pulpitis, or an acute episode of chronic pulpitis. The clinical manifestations of pulpitis include spontaneous pain, nocturnal pain, and pain that is radiating in nature. Patients can not identify the location of the painful teeth, often complaining of pain in half of the face or pain in the temples. It is recommended that patients go to a regular hospital stomatology department in time to identify the cause of the disease and treat the symptoms. For patients with acute pulpitis, the affected tooth needs to be opened under local anesthesia for pulp drainage and routine root canal treatment. Root canal disinfection and root canal filling are needed to completely solve the problem of tooth pain caused by pulpitis.