What should I do if the gums pulled out by diabetic patients after tooth extraction do not heal for a long time, become red and swollen, and squeeze to produce black pus?

It is normal for patients with type 2 diabetes to inject insulin.

The wound healing of diabetic patients is inherently slow, and the immunity is very low, and the wound is easy to be infected. This is a complication of diabetic patients, which usually occurs in patients with poor blood sugar control or a long course of disease.

Therefore, general hospitals are reluctant to treat diabetic patients with dental diseases or other operations. Regular hospitals will carry out very strict preoperative disinfection before tooth extraction, and must adhere to the use of anti-inflammatory drugs after surgery.

If you have symptoms of infection and inflammation, you need to use anti-inflammatory drugs locally, and take some antibiotics orally (metronidazole and the like), and often rinse your mouth with salt water or mouthwash (rinse your mouth in the morning and evening, after every meal or immediately after meals).

If you have suppurated, you should go to the dentist for debridement, remove pus and carrion, and keep the wound clean.

No need to go to a big hospital. Doctors in big hospitals don't take this small infection seriously. I guess they'll prescribe you several boxes of antibiotics.

It is suggested to find a responsible dentist, preferably an acquaintance, and do debridement and disinfection seriously. Remember to tell mom to take medicine on time, rinse her mouth often and don't eat food that sticks to her teeth.

In addition, strictly controlling blood sugar is the most important thing! Otherwise, the complications will be more serious in the future!

I wish your mother a speedy recovery!

After reading the answer downstairs, I couldn't help but come in and say more:

1, the term Staphylococcus aureus has only been in China for several decades. Whose ancestors already knew about this bacterium? Where did you get the secret recipe from your family?

2. Oral infections are all anaerobic bacteria. There are clinical research data: Bacteroides Forsythiae 52.3%, Pro-melanin 86.4%, prey intermediate 56.8%, Fusobacterium sclerotiorum 63.6%, Actinomycetes 38.6%, Streptococcus micrococcus 52.3%, Porphyromonas gingivalis 65.9% and fiber carbon dioxide 9. 1%.

3, anaerobic infection, the treatment drug is amoxicillin or azithromycin plus metronidazole, these are common antibiotics, only doctors can buy it, so it is the same to go to any hospital. It is very important for doctors to clean up the affected area for patients seriously and responsibly!

4. Staphylococcus aureus is an aerobic bacterium, which generally causes pneumonia, skin infection after burns, blood infection and septicemia. , has nothing to do with oral infection. The therapeutic drugs are teicoplanin and vancomycin, both of which are new antibiotics discovered in recent ten years. I don't know whose ancestor discovered it first and forgot to apply for a new drug patent.