Hi peeps,
I guess we are having the same painful experience after a dentist visit. Just last weekend, I went to my dentist for tooth filling. It was on the upper molar,and she had to ask her assistant to hold and pull it on the left side of my cheek while I open my mouth. There was some occasion when I had to hold and signal her assistant to be gentle on my mouth,and be gentle in pulling the sides. I believe when our mouth nerve receive too much handling,such as pulling or stretching,then,it become sensitive,and its why, some cold sore develop a day or the next day.I don't know how to cure this sore.
I also very well know that when I had my braces on,and when the same dentist tried to change the rubber on my teeth,and again have to ask her assistant to keep my mouth open,the same mouth area actually,It was my first time to had that cold sore..Now,I got it again.
I like to go to the dentist,but, if cold sore is not really an enjoyable experience to have.. I hate it,and its preventing me from doing my regular routine everyday because its not ideal to see..grrr.
About 5 years ago I spent 5 hours working in the garden on the first nice sunny hot day we'd had (Windsor, Ontario, canada) - I was careful to apply my sunscreen but forgot about protecting my lips. Next day, water blister (white at first) on my uppper lip. During the night I must have broken it with my teeth, and it turned red and was ugly. Went to the doc and he gave me some sort of cream and it went away but he DID say that from here on in I should be VERY careful in extreme heat AND cold, to wear lip protection because it could happen again. So next winter boom! Same thing again...then good for a couple years and just last night - it has started again (it's very cold here)............so don't stress about it - just see your doc or talk to the pharmacist...they wil recommend a good product for ya.
How many of you with the blisters on your lips smoke cigarettes? I am convinced this is where mine are coming from.
idk what is up with these things but one came up on lip close to the corner, its not one its like two of them , a big and a little one. it wasnt there before I went to bed so idk what caused it.
my friend gets them all the time and its not a cold sore because she doesnt kiss anyone or do anything like tht to get them. they just appear out of nowhere.
You get an infection from the staff nowadays? Wow!
I got the same similar thing that looks like a blister apearing at the bottom of my inside lips, this very thing started after having my wisdom tooth removed from a dentist, I even went back to her after 1 week to complain but she said she does not know what that was. Initially it was appearing once in a while, which I thought it was nothing to worry about but for the past one month it has been appearing more often, sometimes daily, expecially when am taking a shower. mine does not hurt, but it can swoll up and back to normal again and appears on the same spot. Please can someone share some thought as to what is this thing on the bottom of my inside lip.
I think I should do a full allergy test to check if I contacted a bacteria or desease from the dentist?
sorry to tell you but your daughter is a prostitute and she has herpes
Dude... you need to educate yourself. I realize your post is over a year old, but something should be directly said. You can get cold sores from a number of things. Sharing drinks with somebody who carries the virus (not only when they have a blister, but ANYTIME), touching the virus and then touching your mouth, etc.. etc.. Furthermore, the virus can lay dormant. Which means you could have contracted it years ago and only now are you symptomatic. So I am positive that you do in fact have "herpes." Just because it's been a month since you had kissed somebody, doesn' mean you didn't actually contract the virus long ago. Something like 85% of the population have the virus. Many are lucky enough to be asymptomatic. But they can still transmit herpes. They are known as "shedders." Some people only have one outbreak and never again.
I wish I could answer, because the same thing appeared on my lip, suddenly. Winter storms have kept me indoors for 4 days, alone. Does not seem likely to be virus, does it?
No further comment, just forgot to include my email so I can see answers!
So here's my dilemma....looked on WebMD for 'cold sore' AKA 'fever blisters' and they are small & multiple. Canker sore can be single & large, but inside mouth. I do not smoke, have not kissed anyone in TOO MANY YEARS, (70 yr. old widowed at age 53) and last dental visit 3 months ago. Can I benefit from OTC meds such as Abreva, which I could get by local drugstore delivery, or an online drugstore?