Clonazepam ODT and Cymbalta for Burning Mouth

Photo by Karolina Grabowska of Pexels

Another month began and I am still getting the best symptom relief I have ever had without annoying side effects.

Clonazepam ODT at 1 mg and Cymbalta at 40 mg once a day is doing the trick for me. I try not to get too excited about it because I have been fighting this dragon for almost seventeen years, and I know things can change, flares can happen, and medicines can simply stop working.

Meanwhile, I am going to enjoy this respite. I am traveling with my family to Maine for a couple of weeks and then to Amsterdam with my husband. He will be working, but I will take long walks, look at beautiful old things, and enjoy the coolness that is sadly lacking in Texas right now.

Continue reading

Dental Work, Flares, and Burning Mouth

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

Those of you who have been reading this blog or checking in on the “About Kalí” page know that I suspect that dental work was a major contributor to my chronic burning mouth. I can tie the syndrome to dental work in both instances it has occurred in my life and even a dental cleaning, no matter how gentle, can cause me to have a minor flare in burning intensity.

Sometimes you just have to get something major done though, and for me, it was the recent replacement of a very deteriorated crown. It was on my lower left back molar and the porcelain cladding had chipped way over the years until I was chomping on metal.

Eventually, I broke through the metal and actually had a hole that could lead to decay and abscess, and my dentist and I decided it was time to “bite the bullet” and replace that crown.

Continue reading

Just Do It – Burning Mouth Syndrome

Dental Procedure

© Can Stock Photo / LoveVision

The day I have feared for so long has arrived.

I recently lost a crown on a lower molar that had a root canal so many years ago I don’t even remember which dentist or endodontist did it. However, he did not do it well and now I am looking at having to undergo a second root canal on it before my present dentist will put a new crown on it. In order to take advantage of the dental insurance we have through my husband’s job, that root canal will have to happen this year.

I know many of you out there lack that luxury and I am sorry. Even with insurance, the temporary crown was not covered and cost over $500. I know there are families out there who do not have that to spare, and their decision might have been to continue to suffer and end up with a tooth extraction eventually. But beyond the cost element, for those of us who suffer from Burning Mouth Syndrome, we know there will be yet another price to pay.

Dental work can cause flare-ups of our burning that can last weeks, months, or even years. Continue reading