Want this question answered?
Put it under your pillow for the tooth fairy!
Yes, it is very possible to have a tooth grow under a loose tooth. I have experienced this before. If the tooth hasn't come out when the tooth under it is almost done growing, you should see a dentist. I visited a dentist and got my tooth pulled out.
The cost of having a tooth pulled without insurance will depend upon multiple factors. The dentist of choice, the procedure required, as well as if the individual will be put under or awake are all factors in determining the cost.
Yes, when it first starts. I had a tooth that had no problem, but was getting a bridge made so my dentist wanted to pull a particular tooth (too thin to hold the bridge) and found an abscess under the tooth that was just forming. If he hadn't pulled the tooth I am sure that I would have had to see a dentist in the near future for an abscess. Abscess' don't show up on x-rays.
Traditionally, the tooth fairy comes to take your tooth away and leaves payment for each tooth she takes. If you swallow your tooth and there is no tooth under your pillow, you will have nothing to offer the tooth fairy and she might not come.
Depends. If you are having a tooth extracted by a dentist, the root will be removed. If it is a baby tooth you are losing naturally, the roots will dissolve as the new tooth is coming up under the old tooth.
Yeah. But not a whole lot. Your dentist will numb the site, or possibly put you under if it's a complex surgery. But I just had a tooth removed today. The hardest part was the fear and anticipation & the amount of pressure necessary to get that tooth out. The noises were kinda unnerving, but it was all over pretty quick.
the socks end up under the dryer
Well if it hurts under your tooth then probably there is another tooth trying to come in. You have to pull the tooth on top to let the one underneath grow in.
Depending on why you lost your tooth, if you never lost all of your baby teeth (just because you have teeth under your baby onesdoesn't mean your going to lose them (two of my teeth were growing in a way they wouldn't push my baby teeth out and at 17 I got them pulled and within a month they were fully grown in)) and your tooth eventually falls out because of the pressure from the tooth growing under it, or if by chance the tooth that you "accidentally lost" is a baby tooth, AND there is a tooth under it then yes. Other wise no. Go to a dentist. You actually born with tooth buds inside your gums, your milk tooth buds are almost completed forming but the adult teeth have only started. The reason your milk teeth fall out is because the adult tooth bud has finished growing and crushes the root of the milk tooth. Some people are born without adult tooth buds. Count yourself lucky :/
It removes because the under of the tooth has an another tooth already.That's why your tooth replaces another tooth.
An egg will cook quicker under a blow dryer than a lamp because a blow dryer will transfer heat much quicker than a lamp.