Intraoral Lacerations
& Mouth Wound
Treatment in Dallas–Fort Worth
Cuts and wounds inside the mouth can bleed significantly and lead to infection or scarring without proper care. DFWOMS’s board-certified oral and maxillofacial surgeons provide expert intraoral laceration treatment at our Irving, Mesquite, and Ennis locations.
Cuts and wounds inside the mouth require expert care
Intraoral lacerations are cuts, tears, or wounds to the soft tissues inside the mouth — including the lips, cheeks, gums, palate, and tongue. They can result from accidental bites, sharp foods, falls, sports injuries, or dental and facial trauma.
Because the mouth is a highly vascular area, intraoral wounds can bleed significantly and may not heal properly without professional treatment. Left unaddressed, they can lead to infection, scarring, or damage to surrounding structures. At DFWOMS, our oral and maxillofacial surgeons are trained to evaluate the full extent of oral injuries and provide the precise, effective care needed for optimal healing.
Comprehensive care for all intraoral injuries
Each type of oral injury requires a careful examination and personalized treatment plan. Our team has the expertise to treat a wide variety of intraoral wounds across our three DFW locations.
Intraoral wounds may appear minor but can involve deeper tissue layers, bleed heavily, and become infected quickly given the bacterial environment of the mouth. Prompt evaluation by an oral surgeon ensures the injury is fully assessed, properly cleaned, and closed in a way that minimizes scarring and promotes healing.
Signs that a mouth wound needs professional care
Some oral injuries can be managed at home with basic first aid. Others require prompt attention from a specialist. Seek care at DFWOMS if you or your child experience any of the following:
How we treat intraoral lacerations
Our surgeon performs a thorough clinical examination of the wound — assessing its depth, location, the tissues involved, and any risk to adjacent structures such as nerves, salivary glands, or teeth. We take the time to understand how the injury occurred and whether additional imaging is needed.
To ensure your comfort throughout treatment, the area is numbed with local anesthesia before any procedure begins. For more extensive injuries or anxious patients, sedation options are available. All pain management at DFWOMS follows our opioid-free protocols.
The wound is thoroughly irrigated and cleaned to remove debris, bacteria, and damaged tissue. Debridement — the careful removal of devitalized tissue — is performed as needed to reduce infection risk and create a clean wound bed that will heal more effectively.
Larger lacerations and wounds with gaping edges are closed with sutures to reduce healing time, minimize scarring, and lower infection risk. Our surgeons use appropriate suture materials for intraoral tissue — many of which are resorbable and do not require a separate removal appointment.
Before leaving our office, you receive clear aftercare instructions covering diet, oral hygiene, and signs to watch for during recovery. We schedule a follow-up visit to confirm healing and address any concerns — ensuring you recover fully and comfortably.
Expert oral injury care across Dallas–Fort Worth
Common questions about intraoral lacerations
Minor superficial cuts inside the mouth can often heal on their own given the mouth’s rich blood supply. However, deeper wounds, lacerations with gaping edges, punctures, or any wound showing signs of infection should be evaluated by an oral surgeon. Leaving a significant wound untreated increases the risk of infection, delayed healing, and scarring. When in doubt, call us — we are happy to help you determine whether in-office care is needed.
Apply firm, direct pressure to the wound using a clean cloth or gauze for 10–15 minutes without lifting to check. For tongue lacerations, gentle but firm pressure from both sides is most effective. Avoid rinsing aggressively, which can disturb the forming clot. If bleeding is severe, heavy, or does not slow after 15 minutes of pressure, go to your nearest emergency room or call 911.
Yes. The tongue is highly vascular and mobile, which means lacerations here tend to bleed more and require careful assessment. Not all tongue lacerations need suturing — small cuts often heal well on their own — but deeper or wider wounds typically do require closure. Our surgeons evaluate each tongue injury individually to determine the best treatment approach.
Most intraoral lacerations heal within 1–2 weeks. Minor wounds often feel significantly better within a few days. During recovery we recommend a soft diet, gentle oral hygiene, and avoiding irritants like alcohol-based mouthwash and tobacco. Resorbable sutures dissolve on their own over 1–2 weeks; non-resorbable sutures are removed at your follow-up visit.
Coverage depends on your specific insurance plan and the nature of the injury. We accept most major dental insurance providers and Medicaid at all three of our locations. Depending on how the injury occurred, medical insurance may also apply. Our team will help you navigate your benefits before treatment — contact us and we will work through it with you.
Accidental bites are very common in children and most are minor. If the wound is small and bleeding stops with brief pressure, home care is usually sufficient. However, if the bite created a deep or wide laceration, bleeding is heavy or prolonged, or the wound shows signs of infection in the following days, bring your child in for evaluation. Our team is experienced in treating oral injuries in patients of all ages with a gentle, reassuring approach.
Mouth wounds heal best with the right care.
Trust the experienced oral surgeons at DFWOMS in Irving, Mesquite, and Ennis. We provide prompt, compassionate treatment for intraoral lacerations and mouth wounds — so you heal quickly and effectively.