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What to Do in a Child Dental Emergency

Although dental injuries and dental emergencies are often distressing for both children and parents, they are also extremely common. Approximately one third of children have experienced some type of dental trauma, and more have experienced a dental emergency.

There are two peak risk periods for dental trauma – the first being toddlerhood (18-40 months) when environmental exploration begins, and the second being the preadolescent/adolescent period, when sporting injuries become commonplace.

Detailed below are some of the most common childhood dental emergencies, in addition to helpful advice on how to deal with them.

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What Are Dental X-rays Used for?

Toothache

Dental Avulsion (Knocked-out Tooth)

Dental Intrusion (Tooth Pushed Into Jawbone)

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Tooth Luxation/extrusion/lateral Displacement (Tooth Displacement)

Crown Fracture

Root Fracture

Root Fracture

Dental Concussion

Injured Cheek, Lip or Tongue

Fractured Jaw

Head injury/head trauma

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