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I am not asking this question for my baby, I am student and I need to fill this quize as arly as possible so please HELP ME if any DENTIST Is available here. PLZ help me to solve this query.

2007-03-29 03:21:50 · 5 answers · asked by rachna_s83 1 in Health Dental

5 answers

You can't remove a tooth from a newborn! There is nothing wrong with it and putting a small baby through a procedure like that it plain wrong.

I was born with a tooth and while it wasn't ffun for my mum to breast feed, there was nothing wrong with me.

Leave the poor thing alone!

2007-03-29 03:27:42 · answer #1 · answered by Rats 4 · 2 0

What are natal teeth?

Natal teeth are teeth that are present when the infant is born. About one in every 2,000 newborn infants have natal teeth. These are not the same as neonatal teeth that erupt in the infant's mouth during the first month of life. Natal teeth are usually the infant's primary teeth (or baby teeth) that have come in early. The teeth are often loose because the root is not completely developed. Problems that may occur as a result of these teeth include the following:

problems with breastfeeding, as the infant may bite the mother
potential risk of the infant inhaling the tooth into his/her airway and lungs if the tooth becomes dislodged

the pediatric dentist I work for has had to remove a few of these. Usually, only a topical anesthetic is required.

2007-03-29 07:19:59 · answer #2 · answered by yarmiah 4 · 1 0

I am not a dentist, but I am a parent of 5. Teeth in a newborn may be unusual, but it is not an abnormality in need of correction. No action need be taken.

A child of mine got the first teeth in at 2 months. It was not a problem for the child or the nursing mother.

2007-03-29 03:39:17 · answer #3 · answered by Hope 7 · 3 0

those are reported as pre-tooth, and various of the time the tooth are pulled. Sometomes there are toddler tooth waiting to come returned up, now and returned you need to attend till the everlasting tooth are available in. If she's 15 months previous and that they have got not pulled them yet then perhaps she gets to maintain hers. as long as they're clever and arent bothering her then it is going to be nice till the everlasting tooth are available in. the fact they're yellow is rarely of your fault, and is not any longer from the bottle. via fact that those tooth are no longer commonly used toddler tooth, they are no longer as stable. no longer something to stress approximately nevertheless.

2016-11-24 21:18:25 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no anesthesia(injection) is required as it's only milk teeth.the dentist w'd spray his mouth first and then extract out all the teeth immediately.stitching may require if bleeding can't be stopped.

2007-03-29 03:33:29 · answer #5 · answered by robert KS LEE. 6 · 0 1

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