While supervised, have the child rinse gently with a mild solution of salt water. Make sure they spit it all out when they are done. Go ahead and contact the dentist. It is better to talk to someone there. They may need him to come in to take a look at it. Where the salt water will help to prevent an infection, he may need to go ahead and start some antibiotics. They can also see if any damage was done to the incoming tooth, and how bad the gum was injured.
Check with your dentist if it's a permanent tooth. Generally, you'll be advised to leave it alone until it heals, unless the root is damaged.
Baby teeth like this should not be put back. They may damage the new tooth growing underneath.
Most definatly, if your tooth has been knocked hard enough it will become loose and may fall out.
no
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.
kill him and feed him to the ants
no
yes it depends on growth and health ,an 8 year old can grow wisdom tooth
He keeps moving at it with his tongue, or pulling on it, or do the old string to the tooth and string to the door trick.
Of Course.
If the tooth can be saved with a root canal (pulpotomy) or other treatment, it should be done. The adult tooth that will replace this baby tooth may not erupt until the child is six or seven years old, and the dental arch may shrink if the baby tooth is lost too soon. This will lead to problems when the adult tooth erupts and the child may require extensive and expensive orthodontic treatment to correct the problems.
IDK but my 10 year old has the same tooth loose and I'm wondering the same thing.
Legend
Not as traumatic as having to have a tooth pulled out because it is causing tooth ache due to getting bad.