Bone Grafting Guide

Is Bone Grafting Painful?

The idea of bone grafting can sound intense, but most patients find the procedure manageable with local anesthesia during treatment and a short period of soreness afterwards while the site begins healing.

Dr. Moe Reshad, board-certified periodontist at OC Perio & Implants

Specialist Perspective

“What changes the plan is usually the anatomy: the amount of healthy bone, the condition of the gums, the position of the sinus, and whether we are rebuilding one site or planning a larger restoration. A specialist evaluation helps separate what is essential from what is optional.”

Dr. Moe Reshad

Board-certified periodontist at a highly credentialed specialist implant and periodontal team with 30+ years of experience, 40,000+ procedures completed, and Fellows of the International College of Dentists credentials.

What can move the plan:

  • The size and location of the bone defect
  • Whether infection or gum disease has damaged the site
  • Whether the graft is preserving a site or rebuilding one
  • Whether extractions, implants, or sedation are combined

What it usually feels like during treatment

During graft placement, the goal is to keep the area numb so you are not feeling sharp pain while the work is being done. Patients often notice pressure or movement more than pain itself.

The comfort conversation can be different depending on whether the graft is a smaller site-preservation procedure or part of a broader implant reconstruction.

What soreness afterwards is usually like

After the anesthetic wears off, most patients notice some soreness or tenderness for a short period. That early discomfort is usually temporary even though the graft continues healing beneath the surface for much longer.

Recovery can feel more noticeable when the graft is larger or combined with other surgical steps, but that does not necessarily mean the long-term healing is going badly. It is often simply part of the early recovery phase.

How comfort is usually planned

Good grafting care includes planning around comfort from the beginning, explaining what the site is likely to feel like, and telling you how to protect the area while soreness settles down.

At OC Perio & Implants, the consultation is a good time to talk through what your particular procedure may involve and what kind of recovery experience is typical for a graft of that size and location.

  • Local anesthesia is used during treatment
  • Early soreness is usually temporary
  • Sedation options can be discussed for patients who feel anxious

Next Steps

Talk through grafting discomfort before you decide.

If pain is one of the biggest things making you hesitate, a consultation can explain what the procedure usually feels like and what recovery tends to involve.