The skin between your top lip & front teeth is called the Frenum.
It depends if the large flap of skin(called the frenum) is wrapping around the front to the back. When she has lost her front teeth take her to an oral surgeon to evaluate it. Sometimes a simple non- invasive procedure can be done to correct it at that time.
Teeth. Skin, hair and nails are all formed from a layer called the dermis.
It is called a Wattle
Sharks don't have scales. They have skin. Actually they have a kind of teeth on their skin called denticles.
Bats have skin between their front and back legs to help them in flight. When they fly, bats spread their legs and use the skin to glide because it creates air resistance.
No, sharks have skin like sand-paper They have teeth like things on their skin called denticles. That`s why they feel like snadpaper.
calcium keeps your skin bones teeth and hair nice and healthy and i think it also helps your nails!
A dentist who examines the baby can say for certain, but it sounds as though you are describing a perfectly normal situation. What you probably see is called a 'primate space'. This is a necessary space which allows for the normal development and eruption of the permanent incisors (front teeth) which are much larger than the baby teeth. If this space were not present, the permanent teeth would not have enough room to come in straight (about age 5-7). They would be crooked, possibly overlap one another and require orthodontic treatment later to correct. Ask your dentist to take a look just to be sure.
Skin o' My Teeth was created in 1993-01.
it is called a membrane (pronounced- mem- brain) we have it in between our skin and our finger-nails.
I think they do NOT have scales they really do not have them. they have a kind of teeth on their skin called dermal denticles. There are made of the same materials as teeth and have enamel.
Of course it can't. My sister-in-law just had her front teeth done and gaps filled in and some teeth pulled and others capped. The only way you could damage the brain is to shove the tip of the nose hard so the bone goes into the brain. Your teeth have nothing to do with this.