Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Children's health

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

Quick - help! 9 yr old DD has bitten into something and now has v wobbly canine

11 replies

screaminghabdabs · 12/10/2008 17:25

Her first teeth all arrived v quickly and she'd lost them all (I thought) by the time she was 5. She saw the dentist 2 months ago and has perfect teeth (no gum disease/fillings etc)

She's been at a party today and bitten into a cake, felt pain and realised she now has an extremely wobbly lower canine tooth. (Can see underneath it it's that wobbly)

Is this a last remaining baby tooth or could it be an adult one? Do kids continue to lose teeth at this age after so many years of not?

Emergency dentist people say charing cross a and e and wait... but I don't want to go all the way there to discover it's perfectly normal (and look stupid)

Panicking! Please help!

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
screaminghabdabs · 12/10/2008 17:32

Anyone? Please...

OP posts:
mustsleep · 12/10/2008 17:44

i think that you can still have baby teeth when you are nine....sure i knew someone who still had a baby tooth left at the back when she was 15!!

not sure what you would do other than call the dentist tomorrow - have read though in the waiting room before that ifthe tooth falls out not to rinse it and to put it backinto the gum and hold it there until you get to the dentist as they can apparently do something with it

although this is more for if they get knocked out

i think it must be a baby tooth though cos it would surey have been really painful if it was an adult tooth and it would be really painful now as the roots are really deep i think

screaminghabdabs · 12/10/2008 17:54

Thanks for getting back to me. She is in pain but I've decided to take the emergency dentist advice and send her and DH ;) to have it looked at this evening as they said if it is an adult tooth there is more chance of saving it if treated quickly.

Just hoping it's a milk tooth....

OP posts:
jimjamshaslefttheyurt · 12/10/2008 17:56

It's her baby tooth. DS1 (9) lost a canine a few weeks ago (I'll find thread in a minute) - cue massive panic. Rang SIL (dentist) and she said canines (and pre-molar thingies) go at aged 9. He's since lost 3 other teeth.

jimjamshaslefttheyurt · 12/10/2008 17:58

Here's my thread

screaminghabdabs · 12/10/2008 17:58

Wow! I never knew that. Been googling frantically as it's been such a long time since she lost the previous ones. I'd assumed the tooth fairy would be in retirement by now. Thanks for the reassurance

OP posts:
jimjamshaslefttheyurt · 12/10/2008 18:00

Oh I know, I had a huge panic as you can see from my thread

bellavita · 12/10/2008 18:56

DS1 (11) has only just lost some of his "big" teeth a few weeks ago.

Dentist said on their last check up in July that he did not want to xray him and would wait until the next check up, but luckily they have come out by themselves.

Saturn74 · 12/10/2008 18:59

DS1 (12) lost his last baby tooth last week.
DS2 (10) only has one to go.

I'm sure your DD will be fine.

screaminghabdabs · 12/10/2008 20:39

The shame......it is a milk tooth but has now been expertly removed and DD1 is busy writing to the tooth fairy.

Next problem, how the hell do I get to a 9 year old's top bunk without her waking and twigging

Thanks for the replies everyone.

OP posts:
Saturn74 · 12/10/2008 20:40

That's great news.
What a relief!

Twigging what?

New posts on this thread. Refresh page