To hell the Dentist's chair.

in Hell
I don't mind going to the dentist to have my teeth cleaned or filled, but sitting in that chair is hell. It makes the small of my back hurt, as well as my neck, when stretched back. I have asked him not to quickly raise the chair when I am done, as it can cause my back to pop and hurt even more. He said he can not raise it slowly, as it is electric and does its own thing. I asked him not to raise it and to let me climb out myself, not easy, but I did it. I need to find an elderly dentist with a nice old hand pump and a self-adjusting chair. I am guessing that they are all dead.
Comments
For big time dental work I couple sedation ( a couple of sedatives prescribed to me to be taken beforehand) with the easier dental injections.
For the hygienists, I'm going to explore a new apparently less awful procedure and if that doesn't work I'll have to look at getting a prescription to endure that.
I suggest taking sensory discomfort seriously (and change dentist if they won't) - it can be just as bad as pain in some ways.
And going to the opposite end, as it were, I didn't feel the need of any of the options offered during a colonoscopy.
I did when they try and take x-rays of my back teeth. I found by raising one leg and pinching myself I can get through it.
That's bizarre. I swill and spit at the dentist. He/she (dentist/hygienist) wear masks I think but the practice has dropped stuff like scanning for symptoms and insisting on hand hygiene.
Rinse and spit into the wee sink is still a thing at the dentist I go to.
The hygienist is a torturer! I have to see her every three months. (Very old implants which need care and attention)
I never have the hygienist. They charge £85 for the privilege at my clinic and I think this must be private - you used to be able to get your teeth cleaned and all that on the NHS.
I get this in the night sometimes if I sleep on my back, and it's a reason why it's quite scary for me that the dental practice I go to doesn't let us spit any more. Saliva can go down into your airway (and especially if you have EDS, which I do, but I wonder if local anaesthesia also has an affect, such as if you can't feel what your throat is doing). I stay quite alert to it at the dentist and sit up quickly if I need to. You can arrange to make a hand signal if you need to sit up.
You can ask the dentist not to recline the chair fully though - that will reduce the likelihood of it happening again. Mine is also NHS, and they don't recline it fully for me. They have different levels of reclining, because of different people having different health conditions.