When the bumps occur behind front teeth, it could be an indication of incisive papilla. These bumps are common. However, these bumps can get enlarged and you may need to see a medical practitioner to determine if your incisive papilla has enlarged or just suffered a temporary irritation.
Gingivitis is the most common cause of swollen gums. If plaque builds up on your gum line and teeth, over time it can become tartar (hardened plaque), which may lead to gingivitis. If left untreated, gingivitis can turn into a more serious infection called periodontal diseases (gum disease).
Allowing the lesions time to heal, rinsing with warm salt water, and staying hydrated might help treat inflamed or enlarged papillae. If any oral lesion lasts longer than seven days, you should schedule an evaluation with your dental professional.
A bump on the gums can occur for many reasons, such as tooth decay, an oral fibroma, and, in rare cases, mouth cancer. Treatment will depend on the cause. In some cases, surgery or a tooth extraction may be necessary.
Why Do You Have a Hard Bony Lump on Your Gum? What Causes It? Bony growths, also known as exostosis or osteomas, form on top of existing bone and are often the culprit for bone spurs along the gumline. It can be caused by chronic bone injury or irritations.
Unfortunately, there is nothing you can do to get rid of bumps on your gums at home, in most cases. You should see your dentist for treatment if the bump doesn't go away after a few weeks or it is accompanied by the signs of an abscess or oral cancer we noted above.
A dental cyst is a closed sac filled with air or fluid that forms near a tooth or at the tip of a tooth's roots. In most cases, cysts are associated with teeth that have died as a result of infection or trauma. Dental cysts can grow for months or years without causing any symptoms.
This is actually a completely normal structure. It's called the incisive papilla and every dog has one, though some may be more prominent than others.
Mamelons typically begin to wear down within months of teeth erupting through the gums. They usually wear away by the time a child turns 10.
Tori (or a single torus) are bumps in the mouth made of bone tissue covered by gum tissue. They grow slowly and some people have them without ever noticing them!
Torus palatinus
This is a smooth, hard bump on the roof of your mouth, usually centered on the hard palate, just behind the upper front teeth. According to studies, torus palatinus is more common in women. This painless growth could have been present from birth and is only a cause for concern if it increases in size.
Over time, it may lead to the formation of an oral ulcer. This, in turn, means the delicate soft tissues surrounding the hard bony lump on the gums may become infected. All of this means that it requires surgical removal.
Oral fibromas are the most common cause of bumps on the gums. They're noncancerous lumps that form on the irritated or injured gum tissue. If they develop on the gums, it's usually because of irritation from dentures or other oral devices. Fibromas are typically painless and feel like hard, smooth, dome-shaped lumps.
Gum cancer is usually something growing outward from the surface of the gums. It is often a mass and can be either red or white. It may also bleed.
Most oral cysts are benign and disappear without treatment, like cyst draining. Other oral cysts remain small or harmless. However, if a cyst becomes infected, it may turn into an abscess. An abscess can cause extreme pain, swelling, and discomfort and will need medical treatment to keep the infection from spreading.
The incisive papilla otherwise known as palatine papilla is a small pear or oval shaped mucosal prominence situated at the midline of the palate, posterior to the palatal surface of the central incisors.
Conventional methods remove the incisive papilla, the soft tissue between the incisor teeth, and the labial frenum but do not remove interdental bone, the principal impediment to movement of the teeth.
A nasopalatine duct cyst (or cyst of the palatine papilla)grows in your incisive papilla, a place you know as “the hard pallet behind your two front teeth”. Commonly, a nasopalatine duct cyst is painless but if it becomes an irritant, it can be surgically removed.