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He has lost his front teeth at age 3 and now he has lost 1 molar. It doesn't seem like any of his other teeth are growing in yet to replace the ones he has lost?

2006-12-05 17:24:10 · 9 answers · asked by redstormrising2000 2 in Pregnancy & Parenting Grade-Schooler

9 answers

It all depends on the child. My 8 year old started losing teeth when he was 4. They grew in it seems like weeks after they fell out. He has 1 more baby tooth to lose and he's done. While my 7 year old started losing teeth when he was 6 (at the end of 1st grade) and his 2 front teeth haven't even grown in all the way. They've been growing for months. My youngest son, he's 5. He hasn't even lost 1 tooth. They're all different.

Has he lost his bottom front teeth yet? Those are usually the first ones that go. They fall out in the order they grow in (when they're babies). If he hasn't lost the two front, bottom ones yet, then he won't lose them till after those. The two front teeth are the second set after the bottom ones.

2006-12-05 17:35:12 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

6

2006-12-05 17:28:15 · answer #2 · answered by Lynn 2 · 0 0

Around the age of six, the roots of deciduous teeth slowly dissolve as the developing permanent teeth start to push them out. Deciduous teeth eventually fall out and are replaced by the erupting permanent teeth. This begins a transitional phase of tooth development that takes place over the next 15 years. As baby teeth are pushed out by permanent teeth, the entire mouth and jaw transform from their childhood shape to a more pronounced, adultlike structure. From age six to age nine, a child’s permanent incisors, canines, and first molars erupt. The bicuspids erupt from age 10 to age 12, and the second molars come in by age 13. The third molars, or wisdom teeth, usually erupt by the age of 21.

2006-12-05 17:35:22 · answer #3 · answered by geekieintx 6 · 0 0

your persons are being stupid and scaring you for no reason. each and every youngster is diverse and lose tooth even as they're waiting to come back out. If she see's the dentist he ought to have suggested there replaced right into a situation if he felt there replaced into one. As for not eating a similar this is time-honored too. My toddlers all lost a number of toddler tooth in Kindergarten. All 5 of them. My 12 y/o grand daughter is having problem dropping her very last one or 2 toddler tooth. The everlasting tooth is in and the child gained't come out. She is frightened of having them pulled so the dentist is waiting slightly longer. So problem no more advantageous!

2016-11-30 05:04:09 · answer #4 · answered by santella 4 · 0 0

Every child has a different eruption pattern. If you would like to feel better about it take your child to the dentist and get some xrays done. The dentist will be able to see his teeth in his gums.

2006-12-05 17:31:15 · answer #5 · answered by tooyoung2bagrannybabe 7 · 1 0

take him to the dentist, but his teeth should start to grow in, with young children you can feel the top of the mouth and posible feel in a tooth is coming in, not the gums, the pallet

2006-12-05 17:29:33 · answer #6 · answered by Mooshak 3 · 0 0

Why haven't you taken him to a dentist then?

2006-12-05 17:26:44 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

this is much better suited for a dentist to answer

2006-12-05 17:32:36 · answer #8 · answered by kydd 6 · 0 1

if had droped them in an accdent it will take longer time

2006-12-05 17:29:49 · answer #9 · answered by dodo 4 · 0 1

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