Avulsed front tooth reimplanted. Tooth avulsion may occur at any age. The most common age for avulsion of permanent dentition is between 8-12 years old. (Photo credit: Dr Bien Lai, National Dental Centre Singapore)
Last week a parent presented at our clinic with a 7 year old child. Both were visibly distraught.
In her hand, she held a permanent tooth wrapped in gauze. Her son had knocked out (avulsed) his front tooth in school. What is the probability of your child injuring his front teeth like this?
Photo credit: Dr Bien Lai, National Dental Centre Singapore
"Avulsions constitute 1–16% of all traumatic dental injuries to permanent anterior teeth and most often involves the maxillary central incisor. Although avulsion may occur at any age, the most common age for avulsion of permanent dentition is between 8–12 years old," says Dr Tan Wee Kiat, Senior Consultant from The
Department of Restorative Dentistry (Paediatric Dentistry Unit) at
National Dental Centre Singapore, a member of the
SingHealth group.
If your child is a boy, he is more likely to injure his front teeth. If he has protruding front teeth, he is 3.4 times more likely to injure one of them. Falls are the most common cause of avulsion. If he is involved in a bicycle accident, the odds of avulsion is 3 fold compared to falls from other causes.
Many studies worldwide show a lack of knowledge in parents, teachers and secondary students of what to do in such a dental emergency. Yet knowing what to do could save your child’s tooth. Avulsion is one of the most severe type of dental injuries and and its clinical prognosis is very contingent on first-aid measures and agility to seek dental care.
Photo credit: Dr Bien Lai, National Dental Centre Singapore
Permanent Tooth Avulsion: 9 Things to Do
Here is a step by step guide of what to do if you find yourself in such an emergency.
Upset parents result in an even more upset child. If the child is crying, then at least you know that the ABCs are OK. Airway, Breathing, Circulation.
Are there any cuts, sprains, fractures?
Gently pry open lips to have a good look at the front teeth. If there is a socket where the tooth was, then you can presume it was avulsed. Ascertain that this is a permanent tooth and not the primary or milk tooth. The socket will be bigger for the former, and parents usually remember when the baby tooth had already changed for the permanent. Look for the permanent tooth. It will usually be around the scene of the accident. If the child is 5yrs and below, it is probably a baby tooth - do not waste time looking for it. Bring your child to the nearest accident and emergency unit or dental clinic.
The clinical consideration in avulsed permanent teeth is can we reimplant? (put it back into the socket) Two factors will determine if this tooth will “take” and reattach back to the cells in the socket.
And here are some must DOs:
Though you cannot prevent accidents you can certainly equip yourself to manage one.
Step 1: | Images: |
Rinse tooth holding crown under tap water (Plug sink) |
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Step 2 (Do one of the following): |
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Put tooth back in socket | ![]() |
Put in milk or saline | ![]() |
Put in mouth between gums and cheek | ![]() |
Step 3: | |
Go to your nearest dentist of A & E if after office hours. | ![]() |
Ref: N18
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