Sometimes if a child falls and hits a tooth it will cause the nerve to die and cause it to be discolored. As long as it is a primary tooth and not a permanent the child should be fine. But if it is one of their permanent teeth he needs to get in to the dentist and have him test the nerve to see it's still alive, if not they may need a root canal. Either way a dentist will take good care of you, just find the right one ;)
2007-03-19 17:20:40
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answer #1
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answered by Maria E 2
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This happened to my little brother. One tooth got injured and turned brownish/gray- apparently, it was dead. He didn't have to go to a dentist, and I doubt your cousin has to, it's probably a baby tooth and it will fall out in due time. A healthy adult tooth will take its place.
2007-03-19 15:35:17
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answer #2
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answered by 1337_becky 2
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The enamel is death, even if from that distinctive fall or something else isn't probably significant. you ought to call her dentist and ask if he/she needs her to return in. The dentist might propose that it rather is risk-free to bypass away it in, or that they might desire to work out it. I anticipate they're going to desire to work out your daughter because of the fact the micro organism that could desire to be present on a lifeless might desire to reason problems. If it does must be bumped off you is generally stated to get a infant denture put in, rather it rather is a pretend enamel this is completely glued to the lower back molars with the help of skill of a cord device in the back of the enamel. At 3 in case you bypass away a gap in the enamel it rather is a possibility that it could have a adverse result on the grownup enamel, so in many circumstances a splash prevention is rather worth distinctive treatment. there is far less probability then i'm dealing with because of the fact she ought to have all her infant enamel at this factor, however the enamel can nonetheless shift. besides the fact that if infant dentures might nicely be costly and that i comprehend that for some mom and father they are no longer an selection (rather as some insurance would not disguise them besides the fact that in case you have insurance). My son gets a infant denture put in on the 5th, yet he's youthful than your daughter.
2016-10-19 03:21:08
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answer #3
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answered by pereyra 4
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Maybe they hit their mouth on something when they were small. My son fell on our wood floor face first when he was 2 years old. One of his front teeth turned this awful color of grey, it looked decayed. Don't worry about it. Once he looses the tooth the permanant one will grow back normal and white.
2007-03-19 15:37:57
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answer #4
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answered by ? 6
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Tell the parent the child needs state medicaid if they don't have insurance so they can have the tooth treated now. It won't cost them a dime if they qualify they can apply through the welfare office in the area.
2007-03-19 15:35:30
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answer #5
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answered by Chrissy #1 4
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sounds like he has injured the tooth. probably fell or hit it. It may be fine, but he does need to ask the dentist, usually if its slightly grey its fine but dark grey or black its a dead tooth
2007-03-23 12:18:37
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answer #6
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answered by Emily 5
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It could be injury or it could be decay. I would take him/her to the dentist to have it checked. If it is a cavity it could affect his permanent tooth that is still in the gum.
2007-03-19 15:42:38
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answer #7
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answered by DANNY N 1
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He could have damaged a nerve in it when he was real little. Or he could have a cavity behind the tooth.
2007-03-19 15:33:18
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answer #8
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answered by mom of 2 5
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Poor baby! He needs to go to the dentist! It sounds like he has a VERY BAD cavity....it needs to get fixed before it affects his roots and the pain gets to bad, also it could affect his adult teeth
2007-03-19 15:37:06
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answer #9
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answered by kat20mill 2
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the tooth has been injured or is decaying, it needs to be treated by a dentist.
2007-03-19 15:32:42
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answer #10
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answered by parental unit 7
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