Poškozený zub: Co dělat, když zub bolí, je prasklý nebo poškozený

When you feel a sharp pain when biting down, or notice a chip on your front tooth, you’re dealing with a poškozený zub, jakýkoli zub, který má fyzickou nebo chemickou vadu, která ohrožuje jeho funkci nebo zdraví. Also known as poškozené zuby, it’s not just about looks—it’s about infection, pain, and even long-term damage to your jawbone. Many people ignore it, thinking it’s "just a small crack" or "it’ll heal on its own." But teeth don’t regenerate. Once the enamel is broken, bacteria slip in—and before you know it, a tiny chip turns into a root canal.

A zubní kaz, bakteriální infekce, která ničí zubní tkáň od povrchu směrem dovnitř is the most common cause. It starts invisible—just a white spot—and grows silently. A zubní trhlina, prasklinu v zubu, kterou může způsobit kousnutí tvrdého jídla, bruxismus nebo trauma might feel like nothing at first, but every time you chew, it opens wider. And if you have zubní kámen, tvrdou vrstvu plaku, která se usazuje pod dásněmi a způsobuje zánět a odložení zubní tkáně, your teeth are already under constant attack. These aren’t separate problems—they feed each other. Kaz weakens the tooth, trhlina lets bacteria in deeper, and kámen hides it all from view.

You don’t need to wait for screaming pain to act. A sudden sensitivity to cold, a visible dark spot, or even just a weird feeling when you bite—those are signals. The longer you delay, the more expensive and invasive the fix becomes. A small filling today might save you from an implant tomorrow. And if you’ve had a tooth broken in an accident? Don’t just rinse and hope. Save the piece, put it in milk, and get to a dentist within an hour. Teeth can sometimes be reattached.

This collection isn’t about scary stories. It’s about what actually works when your tooth is hurting, cracked, or worn down. You’ll find real advice on spotting early damage, what treatments are worth the cost, and how to stop things from getting worse—even if you can’t get to the dentist right away. Whether it’s a chipped front tooth, a hidden crack, or a tooth that’s been slowly eaten away by kaz, you’ll find clear, no-fluff answers here.