At a Glance
- Service offered: Emergency dentistry that ends acute pain, toothache treatment, root canal therapy, broken tooth repair, abscess care
- Serving: Prospect Heights and nearby areas including the Schoenbeck Road corridor and communities around Route 83, from the Glenview office
- Office hours: Monday 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM | Tuesday to Thursday 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM | Friday 7:00 AM to 1:00 PM
- New patients: Yes, welcoming new patients and same-day emergency appointments
- Key differentiator: A full-service practice, so an emergency repair and any follow-up restoration happen under one roof with the same two doctors
What Relief Actually Feels Like
The point of an emergency visit is simple: you walk in hurting and you leave able to think about something other than your tooth. A throbbing molar that kept you up, a swollen jaw that made eating impossible, a sharp jolt every time cold air hit a cracked tooth. Good emergency care ends that, usually the same day you call.
For Prospect Heights patients, that relief is worth a short drive. The office sits about eighteen to twenty minutes and roughly nine miles east, and patients from the Schoenbeck Road corridor and the Route 83 communities make the trip because a full-service practice can solve the problem in one place rather than sending them somewhere else for the real fix.
The Problems That Bring People In
Most emergencies fall into a few categories. A tooth infected at the nerve produces deep, constant pain and often calls for root canal therapy. An abscess shows up as swelling and sometimes fever, and it needs prompt treatment before it spreads. A break or fracture can leave a sharp edge, expose the sensitive interior of the tooth, or make chewing painful. A lost filling or crown leaves the tooth raw and vulnerable.
Each of these has a clear path back to comfort. Root canal therapy removes the infected tissue and stops the pain at its source. A repair or crown rebuilds a broken tooth. Draining and treating an abscess relieves the pressure and clears the infection. The exam identifies which situation you are in and which fix applies.
How Your Dentist Gets You There
The visit opens with a focused exam and a targeted X-ray of the tooth causing trouble. Your dentist finds the cause, explains it in plain language, and lays out the treatment before starting. Where a crown is needed, the office can often make and place a permanent one the same day using CEREC technology, so you leave with the tooth actually restored rather than patched.
The practice leans toward conservative treatment, preserving as much of your natural tooth as the situation allows. That approach tends to mean fewer return visits and a more predictable result, which is exactly what you want when you came in to make the pain stop.
Who Benefits Most
Emergency care is right for anyone in sudden, real distress: severe or persistent tooth pain, a break from biting down wrong, swelling, or a knocked-out tooth after a fall. Prospect Heights patients who manage multiple appointments appreciate that a restorative or cosmetic follow-up can happen at the same office, so an emergency does not scatter their care across several practices.
If your issue is mild and painless, a small chip or occasional sensitivity you have lived with for months, a planned appointment serves you better than an emergency slot. Save the urgent visit for the problems that genuinely cannot wait.
After You Leave the Chair
Recovery from most emergency treatments is short. Expect mild soreness for a day or two, manageable with over-the-counter pain relief, and follow the specific aftercare your dentist gives you for the treated tooth. If an infection was involved, you may finish a prescription at home.
When a tooth needs more work down the line, such as a permanent crown after a root canal, that gets scheduled once the acute stage passes. The emergency visit's job is to stop the pain and stabilize things. The rest happens on a comfortable timeline.
Preventing the Next Emergency
Once the immediate pain is handled, it is worth thinking about why the emergency happened, because many are preventable. A tooth that cracked under normal chewing was often weakened first by a large old filling, by grinding, or by decay working underneath the surface. Identifying that underlying weakness is part of a thorough emergency visit, so the same tooth does not send you back a few months later.
Grinding, or bruxism, is a common culprit and an easy one to miss. It happens mostly at night, and the damage accumulates quietly: worn enamel, hairline cracks, and eventually fractures. If your dentist spots the signs, a nightguard is a small step that heads off future breaks. Similarly, a filling that has aged and started to leak can be replaced before it fails outright and leaves you with a raw tooth on a weekend.
Prospect Heights patients who manage several appointments at once appreciate that this practice can address both the emergency and its root cause in one place. You are not sent to one office for the urgent fix and another for the follow-up. That continuity matters, because the doctor who treated the emergency already knows the tooth, the history, and the plan. Preventing the next crisis is easier when your care is not scattered, and a full-service office keeps it in one file with the same two dentists. For a community spread along the Schoenbeck Road corridor and the Route 83 area, where full-service dental options with a cosmetic and restorative focus can be hard to find locally, that one-office continuity is a real practical benefit. It means one relationship, one record, and one team that already understands what your teeth have been through.
Meet Your Dentist, Dr. Mike Nolan
The dentist who treats your emergency has spent much of his career providing care to people with no access to it at all. Dr. Mike Nolan has volunteered with the Illinois State Dental Society's Mission of Mercy and Dental Access Days, and for years he has traveled to Haiti and the Dominican Republic with the N.P.H. Mission Group. For nearly two decades he has also traveled to Mexico as part of the El Niño Rey Dental Mission Group, often bringing his own children along.
That volume of hands-on work, much of it treating urgent and neglected dental problems, translates directly into calm, capable emergency care at home in Glenview. Dr. Mike earned his DDS from Loyola University School of Dentistry and keeps his skills current through the Pankey Institute, the Spear Center of Dental Excellence, and the Seattle Study Club. Prospect Heights patients making the drive east get a dentist who has seen nearly every kind of dental emergency there is.
Getting Here From Prospect Heights
From Prospect Heights, the office is about eighteen to twenty minutes and roughly nine miles east. Head east on Palatine Road or Willow Road to reach 3633 W Lake Avenue, Suite 414 in Glenview. Patients from the Schoenbeck Road corridor and the neighborhoods near Route 83 know the route well and make the drive regularly.
That distance is a reasonable trade for care that resolves the problem completely and keeps any follow-up in the same place. Restorative and cosmetic patients from Prospect Heights especially value being able to manage several appointments at one full-service office rather than splitting care across town. Call first so the team can prioritize your emergency and see you as soon as the schedule allows.
When You Are Ready to Call
A dental emergency is stressful enough without wondering where to turn. If you are in Prospect Heights and dealing with pain, swelling, or a broken tooth, the next step is straightforward: call the office, describe what is happening, and let the team find you a same-day slot. An emergency dentist is built for exactly this moment, and the relief on the other side of the visit is worth the short drive east.
Come prepared with your insurance card if you have one, and note anything relevant about your health history when you call. The practice files PPO claims, offers patient financing for larger treatment, and has options for the uninsured, so cost does not have to stand between you and getting seen. Patients from the Schoenbeck Road corridor and the Route 83 area make this trip because the problem gets fully solved in one place. Make the call as soon as the pain starts, and give yourself the best shot at a simple fix and a fast recovery.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will an emergency visit actually stop my tooth pain the same day?
A: In most cases, yes. Emergency treatment such as root canal therapy or a repair targets the source of the pain, which is what brings relief. The practice offers same-day appointments when possible, so Prospect Heights patients can often leave the same day free of the acute pain they came in with.
Can I keep my emergency and follow-up care at the same office?
A: Yes, and that is a reason many Prospect Heights patients choose this practice. It is full-service, so an emergency repair and any later restoration, like a permanent crown, happen under one roof with Dr. Nolan or Dr. Freund. You avoid being referred elsewhere for the real fix.
How far is the office from the Route 83 area of Prospect Heights?
A: It is about eighteen to twenty minutes and roughly nine miles, heading east on Palatine or Willow Road. Patients from the Schoenbeck Road corridor and the Route 83 communities make the trip regularly, and it is manageable even on a day you are in pain.
What are my options if a tooth is too damaged to save?
A: If a fracture or decay has gone too far, your dentist will discuss removal and replacement options, including dental implants, which the practice provides in-house. The team preserves your natural tooth whenever possible and only recommends removal when the tooth genuinely cannot be restored.
Do you take PPO insurance and offer payment options for a big emergency bill?
A: The office files claims with most major PPO plans and works to maximize your benefits. For larger treatment, patient financing is available, and uninsured patients can ask about the in-house membership plan. Coverage is verified before treatment so there are fewer surprises.
Nolan & Freund Dental Professionals
3633 W Lake Avenue, Suite 414, Glenview, IL 60026
(847) 724-6222
https://nolanfreund.com/areas-we-serve/emergency-dentist-in-prospect-heights-il/
New Patient Specials
New Patient Exams
$199
No insurance? We offer a $199 Comprehensive New Patient Exam and X-Rays.
New patients only. Cannot be combined with insurance.
In-House Membership Plan
Call for Pricing
No insurance? We offer an In-House Membership Plan to cover your basic dentistry needs.
Cannot be combined with insurance.
Our Glenview Dental Practice Location
Office Hours:
Monday: 9:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Tuesday - Thursday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday: 7:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Saturday: Closed
Sunday: Closed
