Milk tooth pull like an Olympic champion: tips

Milk tooth pull like an Olympic champion: tips

Around the age of six, a child begins to switch from milk teeth to permanent teeth. An exciting time for the children: every wobbly tooth spurs the ingenuity of parents and adolescents. Should the tooth fall out faster? And if so, how? Or isn’t it better to keep the loose milk tooth in your mouth as long as possible? In fact, it is worth showing patience and waiting for each milk tooth to fail on its own. Only in exceptional cases must the dentist help you to change your teeth.

What happens when changing teeth?

As dentition or second permanent dentition will gradual loss of the milk dentition and the breakthrough of the second, permanent teeth designated. The tooth change takes about from the child’s sixth year to the age of fourteen. While the molars only have to break through, premolars, canines and incisors must prevail against their respective milk teeth counterparts. There is a permanent tooth in the jaw of each milk tooth. The prerequisite for a successful tooth change is Degradation of the milk tooth root by so-called dentoclasts. These are cells that are responsible for the absorption of the root. If the root is partially or completely dissolved, the milk tooth is only loose or no longer anchored in the jaw: it wobbles [1] [2].

Christina Cherry