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BABY TEETH

TAKING CARE OF BABY TEETH

A child's baby teeth are being made before birth while the baby is still inside the mother's womb. During the last months of pregnancy and the first few months after the child is born, the baby teeth take their final form. Pregnant mothers and young children need good food and good health in order to have strong baby teeth.

  • Strong teeth are white and their front surface is smooth.                                       
  • Weak teeth have yellow marks that are pitted and rough.

Baby teeth get marks on them when:

  • 1) the pregnant mother is sick or does not eat good food;
  • 2) the young baby is sick or does not eat good food; or, sometimes,
  • 3) the baby's birth was early or the delivery was
  • difficult.

The marks are rougher than the rest of the tooth. Food sticks easily to them and turns the tooth yellow.

The marks are also soft. They need to be cleaned well every day to prevent them from becoming cavities. A tooth with a cavity hurts. When children's teeth hurt, they do not want to eat as much.

Cavities in baby teeth can make a child's malnutrition worse. Remember this whenever you see a weak, poorly nourished child. When you examine a child at the health clinic, lift his lip and look at his teeth. Do this as part of your routine examination.

You can fill cavities with cement. Cement prevents food and air from going inside the cavity and hurting the child.

A sore on the gums may be a gum bubble. If so, it means the tooth has an abscess. That cavity should not be filled with cement. Instead, the tooth needs to be taken out before the infection can get worse,

For baby teeth to grow strong, mother and baby must stay healthy.* Help her to understand how important this is. A pregnant mother should:

  • 1.  Eat enough good kinds of foods, both for herself and her baby growing inside.
  • 2.  Attend health clinic each month, so the health workers can examine her regularly and she can receive important medicines.
  • 3.  Not use the medicine tetracycline, because it can cause the teeth to turn dark. You, the health worker, must remember-do not give tetracycline to a pregnant woman or to a young child. If she needs an antibiotic, use a different one.

For baby teeth to stay strong, and to prevent marks from turning into cavities, mother should:

  • 1.  Continue to breast feed and never feed her child juice or sweet tea from a bottle. Start adding soft foods, mashed banana or papaya when the child is 4 months old.
  • 2. Wipe her baby's teeth with a clean cloth after the baby eats. This cleans the baby's teeth, and helps the baby get used to teeth cleaning. Later he will be happy with a brush.

Around 1 year of age, there will be several baby teeth. At that time, mother should start using water-not toothpaste-on a soft brush or brushstick. (With toothpaste, you cannot see the child's teeth clearly because of the bubbles it makes.) She should scrub the sides and tops of each baby tooth as well as she can.

The child can also try to clean his own teeth. That should be encouraged. However, since he is too young to clean properly, mother (or father, or older brother, sister) must clean his teeth once a day for him. Continue helping in this way until the child is old enough to go to school.

You can make a large brush smaller, to fit more easily into a young child's mouth.

Pull out some of the back hairs, or cut them with scissors.

Why Baby Teeth Are Important

Baby teeth are just as important to children as permanent teeth are to adults. They help a child to eat, talk, and look good.

However, many people feel that it is not worth the effort to look after baby teeth. Nor is it worth fixing them. After all, parents think, the permanent teeth will take their place.

This kind of thinking is understandable. The problem is that we are forgetting one other useful purpose of baby teeth. Baby teeth keep space in the mouth for the permanent teeth to grow in. If there is not enough space, the new teeth will grow in crooked, and cavities grow faster around crooked teeth.

Under each baby tooth a new permanent tooth is growing.

At the same time, extra permanent molars are forming at the back of the mouth, inside the bone.

Front baby teeth become loose and fall out (usually 6-7 years, but sometimes as young as 5 years) ahead of back baby teeth (10-12 years). This is because the front permanent teeth are formed and ready to grow in first.

The permanent molar (1PM) is often the first of the permanent teeth to grow into the mouth. That happens at 6 years of age.

Permanent molars (PM) come in behind the baby molars (BM).

The first permanent molar grows into the mouth by sliding against the back of the second baby molar (2BM).

Slowly but steadily the upper and lower permanent molars grow until they meet and fit tightly together.

Between the ages of 6 and 11, a child needs healthy baby molars to guide the first permanent molars into position and then to hold them there. When the first permanent molars grow into the right place, this is a good sign. It means the other permanent teeth will also grow in properly, because they will have enough space.

Note: Some people are born without enough space. But most people are not born with this problem-they lose the spaces when they remove baby teeth instead of fixing them.

Tell mothers why baby teeth are important. Good food and regular cleaning keeps them healthy. They should know that new teeth coming in do not cause diarrhea and fever, but that a child may have diarrhea or fever at the same time.

If there is a cavity, fix it so the tooth can be kept in the mouth to do its important work

TAKING CARE OF MOLAR TEETH

We often notice front teeth growing in, but not the back ones. Back teeth-molars-are not so obvious. Swelling on the face can be either a new molar growing in or an abscess. So, to help you to decide, look at the tooth for a cavity and at the gums beside it for a gum bubble.

When you see a swollen face, look for the two signs of an abscess.

But if the person is young (16-22 years), it often is not an abscess. The third permanent molar tooth may be growing in at the back of her mouth. As the tooth grows, it cuts through the skin. Just as a dirty cut on a person's hand can get infected, the cut gum around her new tooth also can get infected, causing a swollen face.

If there is enough space for the tooth, it will grow in by itself It only needs time. Before acting, decide how serious the problem is.

If there is no swelling and she can open her mouth, explain to her what is happening and what she can do herself to reduce infection and toughen the gums. The best medicine is to rinse warm salt water over the sore area. A good home remedy is to rinse until the tooth grows all the way into the mouth.

If it does appear serious (severe pain, swelling, not able to open the mouth), it may be necassary to administer antibiotics.

 

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