From 4 to 8 Months - Healthy Teeth
Baby Your Baby

By now your baby may have one or two teeth. The center lower teeth
are usually first to appear. Taking good care of "baby" teeth is
important because these teeth save space in the jaw for the permanent
teeth. Early loss of baby teeth can lead to crooked and crowded
permanent teeth.
Giving your baby a bottle of formula, milk, fruit juice or sweet
liquid as a pacifier at naptime or as a nighttime comforter can
harm teeth. When the baby is awake, she can continually swallow
the liquid. However, during sleep the fluid pools around the front
teeth. This encourages the growth of decay-causing bacteria, which
can damage teeth.
You can protect your baby's teeth by following these suggestions:
- Begin cleaning your baby's teeth as soon as they
come in. One easy way is at bath time take the warm wet washcloth
over your first finger and gently clean all teeth and the gums.
This will help prevent early decay and establish good oral hygiene
habits.
- Offer only clean pacifiers (not dipped in honey or
other liquids). Honey contains bacteria and is harmful to babies
under 1 year of age.
- Don't let baby go to sleep with a bottle of formula,
milk, fruit juice, or sweetened liquid. Instead, give baby a bottle
of plain cool water if necessary.
- Avoid sugar water, soft drinks, kool-aid, tea, and
Jell-O water in baby's bottle.
- Give baby daily fluoride drops as prescribed by your
dentist or health care provider. If your water supply is fluoridated,
no supplemental fluoride drops should be given.
With your help, your baby can have healthy teeth and a nice smile.
From 4 to 8 Months
Your Developing Baby
Healthy Teeth
Teething
Safety
Nutrition
Hearing and Speech
Is My Baby All Right?
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