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A Head Start on a Healthy Smile
Keep Your Child's Pearly Whites Shining By Alice Patenaude
It's a milestone moment for any parent the day when that first tooth makes its appearance. But how should parents ensure their child's pearly whites will last a lifetime?
Get a Head Start
"The key thing is to start early," says James Orbon, spokesperson for the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD). "The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry recommends a 'first visit by first birthday.' At that visit, we'll show parents how to begin cleaning a child's mouth, which at that point involves wiping the gum with a wet gauze. This serves two purposes: It keeps the mouth and tongue clean and gets the child used to the idea of having his or her mouth cleaned."
For Maria Maggard, an Elmhurst, Ill., mother of one, it was important to start teaching good hygiene when her daughter was young. "We wanted to build good habits with our daughter early," Maggard says. "Now that she's a preschooler, she's almost ready to handle an electric toothbrush by herself."
"Putting a baby or toddler to bed with a bottle filled with anything but water can cause tooth decay," Orbon says.
According to the American Dental Association (ADA), as soon as teeth appear in the mouth, decay can occur. One serious form of decay among young children is baby bottle tooth decay. This condition can occur when an infant is allowed to drink continuously from a bottle of milk, formula, sugar water or fruit juice during naps or at night. If these liquids pool around the child's teeth during sleep, the teeth will be attacked by acids for long periods of time and serious decay can result. If you must give your baby a bottle as a comforter at bedtime, make sure it contains only water, the ADA recommends, and never dip a pacifier into sugar or honey.


