Electric Shock Causes Ticking Tooth - What Could it Be?

AI Thread Summary
An individual experienced a minor electric shock that caused a burn on one finger, followed by a persistent ticking sensation in a tooth, occurring at one-second intervals even while at rest. Participants in the discussion speculated on potential causes, suggesting that the shock might have caused the individual to clench their teeth, possibly dislodging a tooth or creating a nerve response. There was a humorous exchange about the situation, with some participants joking about the unusual nature of the tooth's behavior. The consensus leaned towards the idea that the ticking could be related to nerve damage or a physical change in the tooth's position, although no definitive medical advice was given, as the contributors identified themselves as physicists rather than medical professionals.
wolram
Gold Member
Dearly Missed
Messages
4,410
Reaction score
555
I just had an electric shock, not a lethal one, it just burnt one finger a bit, but now i have a tooth that is going tick tick all the time, it is annoying and is hard to ignore.
Any one have an idea why??
 
Physics news on Phys.org
wolram said:
I just had an electric shock, not a lethal one,

:smile: Glad you clarified that wooly!

I can honestly say I know not why but it sounds pretty impressive. I'd imagine it could tick once if you had a filling and the electricity jumped the gap? Regularly? I couldn't say to tell you the tooth.
 
Provided the two events are related (not proven), I'd guess you clenched your teeth and knocked a filling loose.

Do you mean "ticks all the time even when I'm not moving" or "ticks all the time when I'm talking/eating/swearing at the kbd/etc."?
 
Hope you haven't created a time bomb in your mouth..if that's the case...RUN!
 
From the "Helmock Stones and the Giant Rat of Sumatra" ... with the booby-trapped dog... "Listen! The dog. It has ticks." "Then we must flea!"
 
Do you mean ticks as in rattles like a tooth or filling is loose (like T_E suggested), or do you mean like a nerve impulse or twitchy feeling? If the former, yeah, you probably knocked something loose. If the latter, you've probably done a bit of nerve damage with the shock. If it still has some sort of sensation, it'll likely only be temporary (sort of like any tingling you'd feel elsewhere too).
 
twisting_edge said:
Provided the two events are related (not proven), I'd guess you clenched your teeth and knocked a filling loose.

Do you mean "ticks all the time even when I'm not moving" or "ticks all the time when I'm talking/eating/swearing at the kbd/etc."?


It is ticking all the time, even when i sit still, it is about 1 second intervals,
and i do not have a filling in that tooth.
 
OMG! Your tooth has ticks, so you must flea!:smile:
 
turbo-1 said:
OMG! Your tooth has ticks, so you must flea!:smile:


So now my condition is funny :cry: if it carries on i will be insane in 24hrs:-p
 
  • #10
wolram said:
I just had an electric shock, not a lethal one, it just burnt one finger a bit, but now i have a tooth that is going tick tick all the time, it is annoying and is hard to ignore.
Any one have an idea why??

Just so you know, we're physicists, not doctors. :smile:
 
  • #11
Kurdt said:
:smile: Glad you clarified that wooly!
yeah, the lethal ones hurt like hell.
 
  • #12
wolram said:
It is ticking all the time, even when i sit still, it is about 1 second intervals,
and i do not have a filling in that tooth.

I am speculating that you did clench your teeth when you got the jolt. If it caused a tooth to move down of even a bit sideways it will eventually come back to it's original position. One little tick at a time. The least little touch of a tooth against another tooth results in bone (sound) conduction to the middle ear.

For instance it is nearly impossible to touch a tooth with a solid object without hearing it.
 
  • #13
Thank you Edward, next time i will make sure i do not clench my teeth.
 
  • #14
Math Is Hard said:
yeah, the lethal ones hurt like hell.


And here is me thinking the fatal ones do not hurt :-p
 
  • #15
Math Is Hard said:
yeah, the lethal ones hurt like hell.
Not if it's lethal enough.
 
  • #16
arunma said:
Just so you know, we're physicists, not doctors. :smile:
Sounds like you have a case of excessive virtual particles bouncing around inside your tooth wolram.
 
  • #17
Is it ticking in concert with your pulse?
 
Back
Top