Klarinet Archive - Posting 000122.txt from 2001/02

From: "William J. Pontarelli" <bill@-----.net>
Subj: Re: [kl] teeth
Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2001 00:01:42 -0500

Karl,

Bruises in any other part of the body will eventually heal. A
bruise in a tooth often translates to an abcessed (infected) tooth. An
infected tooth will stay infected and continue to hurt unless the source of
the infection is removed (namely, the interior or pulp of the tooth) A root
canal will solve the problem of chronic infection and pain.

Dr. Jazz
-----Original Message-----
From: Karl Krelove <karlkrelove@-----.com>
Date: Thursday, February 01, 2001 5:23 PM
Subject: RE: [kl] teeth

>Rien,
>
>Could you elaborate a little on where the pain is - i.e. the way in which a
>contusion in her tooth hurts only when she tongues? Is it in the tooth? How
>does the tonguing touch the pain off? I'm surprised a damaged tooth isn't
>causing her more or less constant pain _in the tooth_ anytime it's touched
>by anything (especially by the clarinet mouthpiece). Also, my understanding
>of the term "contusion" (which was evidently the dentists' term for it) is
>that it's a more formal medical name for a bruise. Bruises eventually heal.
>I'm curious as to what's actually going on in more detail.
>
>Karl Krelove
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Rien Stein [mailto:rstein@-----.nl]
>> Sent: Saturday, December 01, 2001 6:08 PM
>> To: klarinet
>> Subject: [kl] teeth
>>
>>
>> Hello listers
>>
>> by chance after the discussion on this list about teeth one of my
students
>> came with the following problem yesterday:
>>
>> In October she run with her head against a door. Since that time she has
>> troubles with her teeth, wasn't able to play clarinet a few weeks. Since
>> that time she had problems with her note attack: she stopped
>> tongueing (she
>> is too young to use this word in an erotic sense). At first I
>> wondered why,
>> and tried to correct this, but only yesterday she told me it was
>> too painful
>> to do so. The dentist had told her she had a contusion in one of her
front
>> teeth.
>>
>> She enjoyes her clarinet very much, always was an eager, though just
>> normally gifted student. Now she is afraid she will have to give up
>> clarinet, as the problem, the contusion, according to her dentist, never
>> will go away.
>>
>> Now of course my question is: what can be done to make her tongue (more
or
>> less) correctly? She had a wonderful double-tongue, but she lost that
>> ability too, as it also is too painful.
>>
>> Thanks for any help you can offer
>>
>> Rien
>>
>>
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>
>
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