I'm still having a problem with "my 17 month old doesn't allow me".... WHAT?! I'm assuming that he's had teeth for at least a year, so this should already be an established routine. But since it's not, there's no time to start like the present. Let him watch as you brush after meals and before bedtime and then brush his immediately afterwards. He should get used to daily hygiene as a normal and required part of life....not as an option that he can refuse or submit to at will.
2007-03-04 23:58:06
·
answer #1
·
answered by apples_ll_apples 4
·
1⤊
0⤋
You should really take him to the dentist because if that black spot is the start of a cavity, it can end up causing him pain. Also, bribery works well at that age. Take something away that he really likes or enjoys (not food, that would defeat the purpose), and tell him he can have it back as soon as you can brush his teeth. Stick to it... if he really wants his favorite toy, or whatever, he'll let you brush his teeth eventually... just don't give in!
2007-03-04 23:47:17
·
answer #2
·
answered by chelelab 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
You need to get that child to a pediatric dentist. The black spot is a cavity, at 17 months he already has tooth decay. You are the parent, brush his teeth dammit. None of us love having our kids scream and cry because they don't want to brush their teeth or take a bath, but you know what? We brush their teeth and give them a bath anyway. You need to figure out who's in charge, and so far it seems like the toddler with rotten teeth is running your house.
2007-03-05 00:53:42
·
answer #3
·
answered by wwhrd 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Black spots on his teeth are probably cavities. He needs to be seen by a dentist. My sister-in-law took her 3 year old son in about a month ago for his first cleaning and her dentist said he had just performed a root canal on a 2 year old.
If I were you, I'd hold your son down (pin his arms down by his sides and pry his mouth open if you have to) and MAKE HIM let you brush his teeth. A child that young shouldn't have cavities.
2007-03-05 08:40:55
·
answer #4
·
answered by brevejunkie 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Take your little one to the dentist first off for a cleaning, cavity check and fluoride paint. Then hold his head close to you and pinch his cheeks to where he puckers up. It might take a few times of doing this before he realizes that you aren't going to hurt him. While his cheeks are puckered get that toothbrush in there working. Try to get some training toothpaste since it doesn't matter if they swallow it. The main this is that he understands that this is something that is necessary to do everyday. If you don't start now you are going to be paying out the butt for dental expenses later on. Good luck and be patient. The first few times are going to probably be short lived. Also my mother in law suggested getting a fun toothbrush and putting like peanut butter or pudding on it and let them play with it and chew on it. (I didn't quite understand this advice but I guess it gets them to be okay with the bristles being in their mouth).
2007-03-04 23:51:40
·
answer #5
·
answered by MOMMY585 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
My sister in law had the same problem with my niece. When the SIL tried to brush her teeth, she'd hurt my niece. SIL would then get angry and holler at my niece. The end result was my neice who is now 8 has horrible teeth and equally horrible breath.
So when my daughter was born, we decided not to make that mistake. We make brushing teeth fun. Lots of silly sounds, lots of silly faces, we play "monkey see, monkey do" and in the end, my three year old has learned to brush her own teeth, and is so good at it that if I forget, she reminds me.
It's all in how you approach it.
Good luck to you.
2007-03-04 23:53:36
·
answer #6
·
answered by kelly24592 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
that would not sound strange to me. If he's asserting a minimum of a few words which you already know, that's somewhat solid. We have been nonetheless translating for my daughter with strangers while she replaced into in simple terms 3, so that's slightly early to anticipate him to be comprehensible to actual everyone. as long as he's making an attempt to talk and is improving gradually, i think of he's fantastic. As for the strolling . . . it fairly is slightly late, yet i've got heard of toddlers no longer strolling until age 18 months until now. nonetheless, i could have a doctor evaluate him and make advantageous there is no longer some variety of underlying difficulty. Is he a minimum of pulling up or cruising on the same time as keeping onto fixtures? if so, that's a solid sign; if no longer, you fairly could desire to get it appeared at. i does no longer hassle approximately it, strategies you, yet he could in simple terms choose slightly actual scientific care to assist get him going. one in all my nephews mandatory it, and a pair of years later he gets around completely in many situations; you will never remotely wager he replaced right into a sluggish walker.
2016-10-02 10:07:23
·
answer #7
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
if you can't control him now..then you are already losing the battle of control...but really these teeth are baby teeth and should not be in his mouth very long anyway...but some dentist have been known to fill baby teeth as they try to keep them longer as you will probably have to have an expensive braces when his perm teeth come in or else he will have a weak chin and buck teeth or maybe just overgrown teeth..but it will be expensive to fix them later if you don't take care of them now..if you are not true to your teeth they will become false to you later
2007-03-04 23:50:02
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
If he has black spots it sounds as if his teeth are rotting. Take him to the dentist.
2007-03-05 00:47:40
·
answer #9
·
answered by Alison 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
Do you use regular toothpaste, maybe that is why, regular toothpaste burns. Try to get him some Tom's of Maine stawberry toothpaste maybe then he will brush his teeth.
2007-03-06 18:05:09
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋