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Primary Teeth FAQ's
How Do I Care for My Child's Baby Teeth?
Though you lose them early in life, your primary teeth, also called baby teeth,
are essential in the development and placement of your permanent teeth. Primary
teeth maintain the spaces where permanent teeth will erupt and help develop proper
speech patterns that would otherwise be difficult; without maintenance of these
spaces, crowding and misalignment can occur, resulting in more complicated treatment
later. It is important to take care of your child's primary teeth.
When do baby teeth come in?
Your child's primary teeth generally make their appearance when he or she is 6 or
7 months old, though it can occur as early as birth. There are 20 primary teeth,
followed by 32 permanent teeth that will eventually replace them. Your child should
have all his or her primary teeth at age 3 and will keep them until age 5 or 6,
when they begin to loosen and fall out. This process usually lasts until the child
is 12 or 13. Primary teeth fall out because permanent teeth are pushing them, and
by about age 14 children have 28 permanent teeth, plus four additional teeth, called
wisdom teeth, that grow behind the permanent teeth in late adolescence.
What can relieve my child's discomfort during teething?
Between the ages of 6 months and 3 years, your child may experience sore gums and
general oral discomfort as primary teeth erupt. While some lucky children experience
no apparent discomfort during eruption, many others do. Signs that eruption is causing
discomfort in your child include crankiness, lack of appetite, excessive drooling,
restless behavior, pink or red cheeks, coughing, upset stomach and chewing or sucking
of fingers and toys. There are ways you can bring your child relief. A cold, wet
cloth for your baby to suck on can sooth gums. There are also teething accessories
and toys your child can chew on to relieve discomfort. Thumb sucking also brings
relief, however, dentists recommend this practice should cease upon the arrival
of the first permanent teeth, so it does not interfere with the normal development
of a child's oral cavity.
Should loose primary teeth be pulled?
Losing primary teeth before they are ready to fall out can affect the proper positioning
of the permanent teeth. If a baby tooth is lost too early, other teeth may tip or
fill in the vacant space, forcing permanent teeth to come in crooked. If a baby
tooth is knocked out, see your dentist, who may recommend a space maintainer to
reserve the gap until the permanent tooth comes in. In instances where a primary
tooth is loose because of the emergence of a permanent tooth, have the child wiggle
the tooth or eat something hard, such as an apple, to help it along. Once the shell
of the tooth is disconnected from the root, the discomfort in extracting a loose
primary tooth is minimal.