The first week with new dentures is harder than nobody warns you about. Eating feels alien. You’ll lisp. You’ll drool unexpectedly. You’ll get sore spots. This is normal and temporary — and there’s a way to make it easier. Here’s the day-by-day Brooklyn patient survival guide.
Day 1 — The Adjustment Begins
- What you’ll feel: Pressure, fullness, increased saliva, mild gag sensation (especially upper dentures). This is your mouth recognizing a new object.
- Eat: Pureed and soft foods only. Yogurt, applesauce, mashed potatoes, scrambled eggs, oatmeal, smoothies, soup.
- Take dentures out at bedtime. Soak in water (not hot) overnight. Lets gums recover.
- Most patients have a 4-6 hour “this isn’t going to work” moment. It passes.
Days 2-3 — Sore Spots Appear
- What you’ll feel: Pressure points on gums, often on the inside back. These are spots where the denture rubs too hard. Look for small red marks.
- What to do: Call us — we adjust dentures FREE at this stage. Don’t suffer. A 5-minute adjustment makes a huge difference.
- Eat: Add soft pasta, slow-cooked meat (no chewing), well-cooked vegetables.
- Keep dentures in 22 hours/day this week — except for cleaning and sleeping.
Days 4-5 — Speech Adapts
- What you’ll feel: Lisping on S, F, V sounds is reducing. Read aloud for 10 minutes 2x daily — newspapers, anything. The tongue adapts faster with practice.
- Saliva flow normalizes. The initial drool/extra-spit phase is over.
- Sore spots are 80% better if you came in for adjustments.
- Eat: Add tender chicken, fish, soft sandwiches (no crusty bread yet).
Day 6 — Confidence Returns
- Most patients can eat in public without anxiety.
- Speech is 90% normal — small residual lisp on “S” lasts another 1-2 weeks.
- Eat: Most everything except super-hard (carrots, nuts) and very sticky (caramel, taffy) foods.
Day 7 — Back to Normal Life (Mostly)
- Daily routine feels established.
- Some patients can eat steak (cut very small).
- One week down, lifetime to go.
Eating Strategy — What Order Foods Become Possible
| When | Foods to try | Foods to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1-2 | Yogurt, applesauce, mashed potatoes, eggs, oatmeal, smoothies, soup | Anything that needs biting |
| Day 3-4 | Soft pasta, slow-cooked meat (cut tiny), cooked vegetables, soft cheese, custard | Crusty bread, raw veggies, popcorn |
| Day 5-7 | Soft sandwiches, baked fish, ground meat, baked potatoes | Whole nuts, hard candy, caramel, gum |
| Week 2-3 | Steak (small pieces), pizza (chew slowly), salads | Whole apples (cut first), corn on cob |
| Long-term | Most foods normally | Caramel, taffy, popcorn kernels, hard nuts |
Adhesive — When and How Much
New dentures should be retentive without adhesive if they fit well. But adhesive helps confidence in the first 2 weeks:
- Use: A small pea of cream adhesive (Fixodent, Polident). For upper dentures, 3-4 dots in a Y pattern. Less is more — too much oozes out.
- Don’t use: Powder adhesives (less precise), zinc-containing adhesives long-term (rare neurological side effects with daily use over years).
- Reapply: Once a day at most. If you need to reapply more often, your denture needs adjustment.
- Remove at night. Adhesive residue cleans off with a damp paper towel.
5 Common Problems and Fixes
Problem 1: Upper denture falls down when laughing/talking
Suction is weak. Causes: dry mouth (try a small sip of water), poor fit (we adjust), or adhesive not engaged. Quick fix: damp the underside with water, then press up and hold 30 seconds.
Problem 2: Lower denture floats around
Lower dentures have less surface area for suction. This is normal physics. Solutions: a thin coat of adhesive, training your tongue to hold the denture down (it learns within 2 weeks), or — long-term best fix — mini-implants ($4,500-7,000) to lock the denture in place.
Problem 3: Painful sore spot on inside cheek
Denture flange too long. We grind it down in 3 minutes. Free adjustment in first 6 months.
Problem 4: Gag reflex when upper denture goes in
Usually resolves in 5-7 days. If persistent, the back edge of the upper denture may need to be shortened — quick adjustment.
Problem 5: Food trapped between denture and gums
Normal but annoying. After every meal: take dentures out over a sink filled with water (so they don’t break if dropped), rinse, brush gums, reinsert. Carry a travel toothbrush.
Daily Care Routine
- Morning: Rinse mouth, brush gums and tongue with soft brush. Rinse dentures from overnight soak. Insert with small amount of adhesive if needed.
- After meals: Quick rinse. Brush dentures with denture brush + non-abrasive denture cleanser (NOT regular toothpaste — too abrasive).
- Before bed: Remove dentures. Brush dentures + gums. Soak dentures overnight in plain water or denture solution. Sleep without dentures.
When to Call Eco Dental NY
- Sore spot persists more than 48 hours after adjustment
- Denture is loose enough to fall when chewing
- Strong taste of denture material that doesn’t fade
- Cracking sound or visible crack in denture
- Burning sensation under denture (rare allergic reaction, usually to base)
- Difficulty with specific words after week 3
Call (718) 368-3368). First 6 months of adjustments are FREE for dentures placed at our office.
FAQ — First Week With Dentures
How long does it take to get used to dentures?
Eating normally: 2-3 weeks. Speaking without lisp: 3-4 weeks. Fully comfortable: 8-12 weeks. Permanent denture wearers typically forget they’re wearing them within 3 months.
Should I sleep with my dentures?
No. Remove them at night. Gums need to recover from 16+ hours of pressure. Sleeping with dentures also increases risk of yeast infection and pneumonia (especially in older patients).
Why am I drooling more with new dentures?
Your mouth treats the denture as food initially and increases saliva. Normal for first 3-5 days. Helps with adjustment, then fades.
Can I eat steak with dentures?
Yes, after week 2-3. Cut into pieces smaller than 1/2 inch, chew slowly using both sides. Avoid biting tough foods with front teeth (this is the #1 cause of denture fractures).
Will my face look different with dentures?
Yes, in a good way. Dentures restore the lip and cheek support that was lost when teeth went missing. Most patients look 5-10 years younger. The fit and tooth size are adjusted at try-in to look natural.
How often should I see the dentist after getting dentures?
3-4 visits in the first 3 months for adjustments. Then once yearly for relines (typically every 1-2 years) and full denture replacement every 8-10 years as gums shrink.
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