Soft Tissue Mouth Injuries

Soft tissue mouth injuries like cuts and tears need prompt care. Fox View Dental serves De Pere, Allouez, and Ashwaubenon with same-day treatment.

Don't Take Any Chances on Your Oral Health

Cuts, Tears, and Mouth Trauma Deserve Prompt Care

Injuries to the soft tissues of the mouth, including the gums, tongue, lips, and inner cheeks, can be alarming. They bleed heavily, they hurt, and it can be hard to assess their severity on your own. Because the mouth has a rich blood supply, even a relatively minor laceration can produce a significant amount of bleeding that looks more serious than it is. But some soft tissue injuries are serious, and knowing the difference between what you can manage at home and what requires professional care is important. At Fox View Dental, Dr. Chad Yenchesky and our team are equipped to evaluate and treat oral soft tissue injuries, provide guidance on wound care, and address any underlying dental damage that may have occurred alongside the injury.

If you’ve experienced a mouth injury and need emergency dental care in De Pere, call Fox View Dental at (920) 336-4201.

What Makes Fox View Dental the Right Choice for Dental Emergencies

Dental emergencies are stressful. Pain, blood, and uncertainty make it hard to think clearly about where to go or what to do. What Fox View Dental offers isn’t just clinical competence, though Dr. Yenchesky’s depth of training across restorative, implant, sedation, and emergency dentistry is genuinely extensive. It’s the experience of walking into a practice where the team is calm, kind, and already prepared to help you. 

That atmosphere is intentional. Dr. Yenchesky has built a practice culture centered on patient comfort in everything from the physical environment, blankets, neck pillows, flat-screen TVs, and woodland prairie views from the exam chair, to the way the team communicates and follows up after procedures. When you’re dealing with a soft tissue injury and the anxiety that comes with it, that kind of environment matters.

Dr. Yenchesky puts on a friendly, caring smile during a patient consultation.

What Counts as a Dental Soft Tissue Injury?

Soft tissue injuries of the mouth encompass damage to any of the non-bony oral structures: the gums, lips, tongue, and inner cheek lining. They run the gamut from small abrasions that resolve with minimal care to deep lacerations that require stitches and monitoring for infection. The specific type of injury has some bearing on how it’s treated and how urgently you need to be seen.

  • Lacerations are cuts or tears among the most common types of soft tissue mouth injuries, frequently caused by sharp objects, the teeth themselves, or blunt trauma that drives soft tissue into a hard surface. 
  • Contusions, or bruises, result from blunt force and cause swelling and discoloration without breaking the skin. 
  • Abrasions are surface scrapes that sometimes occur when rough food, a dental appliance edge, or an impact grazes the inner cheek or gum tissue. 
  • Puncture wounds penetrate deeper into the tissue and carry a higher infection risk because the wound surface can close over while bacteria remain trapped inside. 
  • Burns from hot food or beverages, or chemical exposure from improper use of products like hydrogen peroxide, can damage the delicate mucosal tissue in the mouth. 
  • Bite injuries to the tongue, lip, or cheek are common, particularly during seizures, athletic activity, or moments of inattention while eating.

When a Soft Tissue Injury Needs Professional Evaluation

Basic first aid is appropriate for minor mouth injuries, and many small cuts in the mouth will resolve on their own, given the tissue’s strong blood supply and natural healing capacity. But certain situations require a dental or medical evaluation rather than a wait-and-see approach. Seek professional care if a cut or laceration is deep, wide, or gaping and the edges aren’t coming together on their own. If bleeding doesn’t slow or stop after 15 minutes of firm, consistent pressure, that wound likely needs professional attention. 

Signs of infection, including increasing warmth, swelling, discharge, or a bad taste that develops in the days following the injury, warrant evaluation. Any soft tissue injury that occurred alongside dental trauma, such as a knocked-out tooth, a fractured tooth, or a blow that may have affected the jaw, should be assessed at a dental office even if the soft tissue injury itself seems minor. Injuries involving a dental appliance, a sharp tooth, or a broken restoration that’s continuing to irritate the tissue also benefit from professional evaluation so the source of irritation can be addressed.

If you’re unsure whether your injury needs care, it’s always safer to call us at (920) 336-4201 and describe what you’re seeing. Our team can help you decide whether to come in right away.

First Aid for Soft Tissue Mouth Injuries

Before you arrive at our office, these steps can help stabilize the injury:

  1. Apply firm, consistent pressure to a bleeding area using clean gauze or a clean cloth. Hold the pressure without releasing it to check for several minutes at a time. 
  2. Rinsing the mouth gently with a mild saltwater solution can help keep the area clean without disrupting any clot that’s forming. 

Cold applied to the outside of the face (never directly inside the mouth) can reduce swelling and provide mild pain relief. Over-the-counter ibuprofen is appropriate for pain and inflammation. Avoid aspirin, which can affect clotting. If a tooth is involved in the injury, handle it correctly (refer to our knocked-out tooth guidance) while managing the soft tissue injury simultaneously.

older man with braces

Common Causes of Soft Tissue Mouth Injuries

Accidental trauma is the most frequent cause. Falls are particularly common in children and older adults, and the impact of a face hitting pavement, flooring, or furniture often drives soft tissue against teeth or other hard surfaces. Sports injuries are another major contributor, which is why Fox View Dental recommends custom-fitted mouthguards for patients who participate in contact or collision sports. A properly fitted athletic mouthguard protects not only the teeth but the lips, tongue, and inner cheeks from the sharp surfaces teeth create during impact. 

Dental appliances that fit poorly or have sharp edges, whether traditional braces, ill-fitting dentures, or a fractured crown, can cause chronic abrasion of the inner cheek or gum tissue that worsens over time. If an appliance is consistently irritating the same area, that’s something Dr. Yenchesky should know about, so the fit or edge can be corrected before the tissue breaks down further.

Medical conditions, including epilepsy, can lead to bite injuries during seizures. Certain oral infections, including aphthous ulcers (canker sores) and herpes simplex outbreaks, can make tissue more fragile and susceptible to tearing.

Treatment at Fox View Dental

Soft tissue injury treatment begins with a careful assessment to understand the depth, extent, and nature of the wound as well as any associated dental or bony injury. Dr. Yenchesky uses digital imaging when indicated to rule out fractures to the teeth, jaw, or alveolar bone.

For lacerations that require closure, suturing may be performed in the office depending on the depth and location of the wound. Minor suturing of oral tissue is within the scope of dental care, and the mouth’s exceptional healing environment means oral wounds often resolve faster than comparable skin injuries. For injuries with signs of infection or a high risk of developing one, Dr. Yenchesky may prescribe antibiotics and guide wound care to support healing. If a broken tooth, fractured restoration, or appliance issue is contributing to the soft tissue injury, that source of irritation is addressed as part of treatment. A cut that keeps reopening because a sharp tooth edge is constantly re-traumatizing it won’t heal until the cause is corrected.

Meet Our Doctor

dr chad yenchesky

Dr. Chad Yenchesky

Dr. Chad is no ordinary dentist.
He’s an extraordinary dentist!

As the owner of Fox View Dental, Dr. Chad Yenchesky—or Dr. Chad, as he is more commonly known—brings the best in digital dentistry to Green Bay and Northeast Wisconsin.

Known for his passionate pursuit of implant, restorative, cosmetic and sedation dentistry, loved for his fun and colorful personality, and respected for his active leadership in the national dental continuing education community, Dr. Chad brings a refreshing blend of knowledge and charisma to the chair. Patients especially appreciate his down-to-earth demeanor, relentless …

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Contact Fox View Dental After a Mouth Injury

Soft tissue injuries of the mouth deserve the same prompt, professional attention as broken or knocked-out teeth. At Fox View Dental, Dr. Chad Yenchesky and our team are ready to evaluate your injury, provide the right level of care, and make sure you leave our De Pere dental office with clear guidance on healing. We serve patients throughout the Green Bay area, including Allouez, Ashwaubenon, and Howard. Call us at (920) 336-4201 any time you’re dealing with a dental emergency, and we’ll get you in the same day.

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