Permanent Teeth Coming in Behind Baby Teeth and the Tooth Fairy

Updated on August 23, 2012
D.K. asks from Richmond, IN
5 answers

This morning during breakfast, I noticed that my son has a permanent tooth coming in behind his baby tooth. His baby tooth didn't appear to be loose at all. I was surprised to see the entire top of his permanent tooth cut through the gums behind his baby tooth. I remember waiting forever for my first two permanent teeth to come in after my baby teeth came out. If your child's permanent teeth came in behind their baby teeth, how long did it take for the baby teeth to fall out? How long did you wait to take your child to the dentist? I would have called our dentist today, but the office is closed on Thursdays. Before he went to bed tonight, his tooth was a little loose. So, I am guessing it will fall out on its own soon. He was nervous to go to sleep with a loose tooth. Actually, I am feeling a little nervous about that now, too.

What are some fun ways you celebrated your child loosing their baby teeth? Do boys like the tooth fairy? I have a tooth fairy pillow, but the tooth fairy isn't really done in Japan. We currently live in Japan. Japanese children try to throw their baby teeth over their house to get a wish. Since we live in a seven story apartment building, I don't really think that will work.... Please share your fun ideas for celebrating loosing baby teeth.

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So What Happened?

I had to go to the dentist shortly after I made this post, so I had the dentist take a look at my son's teeth. By then, one was pretty loose, and he said that they should come out soon enough on their own. The dentist had an orthodontist take a look at my son's teeth, and she informed us that based on the size of his mouth and his teeth that he would most likely need braces in the future. It looks like he inherited that from me.

Anyway, my son's two teeth finally came out. He was super excited to put his tooth in his tooth fairy pillow. I even had a couple of American coins that I put in there for his first tooth, along with a shiny ¥500 coin. I thought ¥500 looked nicer for the first tooth. Then for his second tooth, we decided to give him a little less, but we didn't have any ¥100 yen coins so we went with ¥500 again. We have started to save the ¥100 coins now in a small bank to use in the future. We had already told him that the first tooth was super special, so he would probably get more for it. But he is so funny. When he found the ¥500 coin for the second tooth, he said "Maybe the tooth fairly had a hard time to find Japanese money, so I have to take whatever she can find. Maybe next time it will be a smaller coin. That's ok, I am just excited to see what I get, and I like the American money I got. It's cool." I only had a penny and a dime. I think I will have my mom send a few of the State quarters our way for future use.

More Answers

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T.F.

answers from San Francisco on

I thought my daughters teeth might come in like that because mine did. I think now the dentist will pull them out for you but I hd to wiggle and wait. Since they are baby teeth they do come out. I remember one of the last ones that came in like that. I was a little older and just wanted the darn thing out. So I attached a string to it. Tied the end of the string to a door knob and slammed it. Wham, Wham! The string was too short and I was standing too close. The door ricocheted back and hit me in the face Hard! To add insult to injury, my tooth was bleeding but didn't fall out at that point.

1 mom found this helpful

C.C.

answers from San Francisco on

My younger daughter just went through this - we told her she was growing shark teeth! LOL Her bottom baby teeth were only a little bit loose, and both adult teeth grew in right behind them. We took her to the dentist, and he wiggled her bottom teeth and said, "They'll fall out on their own." He seemed totally unconcerned. So we had to keep telling her to wiggle her teeth. (A lot of kids are really reluctant to lose their first few teeth - I think they're afraid it will hurt, or they just don't like the idea of their teeth falling out.) Anyway, it took a long time (months) for her baby teeth to fall out. They finally did, though, and now her adult teeth are moving into place where the baby teeth had been.

In terms of how we celebrated it, my kids both have tooth fairy pillows, and they get a gold dollar. Is there some form of gold coin that you could use in Japan? (Or do you have any American money, since that will look unusual/exotic to your child?) It doesn't seem like throwing the tooth over the house will work in such a large building, I agree! :)

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G.B.

answers from Oklahoma City on

Our kids go to the pediatric dentist every 6 months and he told us months ahead of time that the permanent teeth were about to break through. I think that the dentist must not be worried if he didn't say anything at the last appointment.

If he needs to have the teeth pulled in a few months then deal with it then. Otherwise, his tooth will hang on and hang on and hang on until you have to pull it out. It takes weeks, maybe even a month, for a tooth to get loose enough to pull, much less fall out while he's asleep.

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K.

answers from Chicago on

My daughter had this and the dentist said not to worry and to give it time. Sure enough within a couple of weeks she lost the baby tooth. The dentist said he would have to pull it only if months went by without the losing the tooth. I say stick with the tooth fairy. Kids love finding something under the pillow!

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S.T.

answers from New York on

My daughter had "sharks teeth" two rows of teeth - many of her baby teeth just didn't want to come out and a few of them had to be pulled by the dentisit eventually. I didn't even notice the permanent teeth were coming in behind her baby teeth - the dentist did of course during a check up. My daughter was supposed to try to wiggle them and loosen them up and when they didn't budge we went back after a few weeks and had them pulled. But - later teeth did push the baby teeth out - I guess it's how the perm teeth come in - my DD needs orthodontic appliances starting at the end of 2nd grade.

As for how to celebrate losing their teeth - we're not realy big on all of that. We'd wrap the tooth in a napkin (with colors on it - make it easy to find in the dark) and slip it under thier pillow. Best story though is when my son began playing football in 2nd grade - he lost a tooth during practice somewhere on the field. It was gone but we persuaded my son that the tooth fairy would still come (we reminded him of how she found us on vacation for his older sister, etc.). So, my son sat down and wrote a note to the tooth fairy (we still have it). This was a child with language based learning disability and who really struggled to write. But I guess he was motivated! he suggested that the fairy might be able to find the tooth at the middle school field, near the bleachers and he apologized. It was so sweet. ;o)

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