Opioids & Dental Pain

Opioids are a type of medication used to relieve pain. They require a prescription from health care providers such as your dentist or doctor, and include drugs such as hydrocodone, oxycodone, morphine, and codeine. Opioids also include illegal drugs such as heroin.

View information for dentists here.

To ease discomfort that can result from some dental procedures, such as tooth extraction, gum and other dental surgery, or placement of dental implants, dentists may prescribe medications for pain relief, including opioids. Commonly prescribed opioid medications for relief of dental pain include hydrocodone, oxycodone, and acetaminophen with codeine. (Visit the Drugs, Herbs, and Supplements database from NIH’s MedlinePlus for generic and brand names of medications.)

Prescription opioids can be used to treat moderate-to-severe pain and are often prescribed following surgery or injury (visit CDC’s Prescription Opioids webpage). But because they can cause temporary feelings of well-being and happiness as well as pain relief, they can be misused. For example, taking these types of medications for a longer period of time or at a higher dose than prescribed can increase your chances of becoming dependent on opioid medications. And, when misused, opioids can lead to addiction, overdose, or death. (See NIH’s National Institute on Drug Abuse information on opioids.)

Addiction or overdose is possible for anyone who takes prescription opioids, even when used as directed. In 2021, opioid overdoses in the U.S. accounted for nearly twice as many deaths as car accidents (25 vs. 13 deaths per 100,000 people). Many of these deaths – 16,000 or nearly 1 in 6 of all opioid overdoses – were from overdoses involving prescription opioids.

Moreover, recent research shows that patients who fill an opioid prescription after a dental procedure have a higher overdose risk compared to patients who don’t receive opioids. Overdose risk is also higher in family members of those patients, especially their children. For many teens and young adults, first exposure to opioids often happens after wisdom-tooth removal. In young people, prescription opioid use is linked to continued and non-medical use of opioids.

It is important to know there are over-the-counter, non-opioid medications—acetaminophen and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen—that can be just as or more effective for managing most dental pain, with fewer side effects and lower likelihood of harm. Talk with your dentist about which medications may be right for you.

Helpful Tips

Be sure to talk with your dentist about how to manage pain after a dental procedure: