First, track down that tooth! You can actually take it to the dentist and have it reimplanted, provided that you handle your knocked-out tooth somewhat delicately.
Once you’ve found the tooth, be careful cleaning it off—it’s best to just gently rinse it with milk or a saline solution so that you don’t accidentally damage it further. Try not to touch the roots.
On your way to your emergency dentist appointment, keep the tooth in its original socket, if that’s possible. And if not, a little container of milk is a great tooth receptacle—the milk’s sugars can feed the cells, keeping them alive until they can get reimplanted.
If all goes well with the reimplantation, your tooth can be healed in two months.
More than five million teeth are knocked out every year in children and adults but if this happens to you due to an injury or accident it doesn’t necessarily mean it’s lost for good. Proper emergency action can save the tooth so that it can be replanted successfully and last for years to come.
Knocked-Out Tooth
A knocked-out tooth is an emergency that requires immediate medical attention. If these emergency tips are followed right after a tooth has been knocked out, there is a good chance that the tooth can be saved.
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND VIDEO GO TO:
http://www.emergencysuppliesinfo.com/dental-emergencies.html
Pick up the tooth by the crown (the chewing surface) NOT the root.
If dirty, gently rinse the tooth with water.
Reposition the tooth in the socket immediately, if possible.
Keep the tooth moist at all times.
See an endodontist or dentist within 30 minutes of the injury.
Find it, put it in milk, and race to a dentist.
You should find your tooth and put something on the oozing blood then call a dentist and get help ASAP.
They don't! Unless you were born with 3 sets of teeth
you nock there tooth out and get some salt water for your tooth
Go to the dentist to get it checked out?!!!
read the book smile to see what happena to your teeth
All mammals are born with a set of milk teeth, also known as baby teeth, and adult teeth. A dog is in this classification. If the dog's too is knocked out between the ages of 2 to 3 months old their adult tooth come in. If the tooth that is knocked out is an adult tooth it won't.
In humans, we only get two sets of teeth. Children have what are known as milk teeth and these fall out, or are knocked out accidentally. We then get our adult teeth. In some other species - such as sharks, the teeth are continuously renewed.
you can get two teeth your primary "baby: teeth and your permanent "adult" teeth. when you lose you adult teeth it will not grow back
If it was the first teeth that was pulled the adult ones will grow up there in time. You just have to wait. If it was the adult ones that was pulled nothing will grow back. You have no more teeth in that place.
No u don't get ur baby teeth back u then grow ur adult teeth !
No u don't get ur baby teeth back u then grow ur adult teeth !
Because they are the set that are to last you for your adult life. If you pull your adult teeth out, they will not grow back.
No you only get 1 set adult teeth
I believe this is because your adult teeth are there all the time and just move up to replace your baby teeth. It is not that adult teeth suddenly start growing when your baby teeth fall out. If an adult tooth is lost, there is nothing there to replace it.
Yes. Like all other teeth molars have two sets of teeth. If you loose your first set (Baby teeth) they will grow back into adult teeth. But if your adult teeth fall out (second set) just like other teeth they will not grow back. It is painfull to have teeth missing, but you get used to it.
Once a person is past childhood, adult teeth do not "grow back" once they've been extracted (pulled out).
they will grow back they will not die if one of their whiskers fall out it is like us we lose our teeth and our teeth grow into adult teeth right? will for them they lose their whiskers and like I said they grow back.