The Basics About Your Child’s Wisdom Teeth

Most children start losing their baby teeth at six or seven years old. The final molars in the back of the mouth (known as wisdom teeth) generally fully develop in a person's later teen years. As your baby is gaining wisdom and wisdom teeth, you will want to know about these teeth and when to extract them.  Evolution of Wisdom Teeth Over the years, our mouths have evolved to be a smaller size. Read More 

How Having Siblings Sit With One Another In A Dental Office Can Help Their Relationship

Most children will not enjoy going to the dentist. Even if your child never has to have cavities filled or teeth extracted. Having to sit inside of a dentists chair for long periods of time with their mouth in an uncomfortable position can make even patient children crabby. If you often have to work and must drop your children off at the dentist's office for their servicing alone, you should have your children accompany one another inside of the dental chair. Read More 

2 Ways to Help Your Child Not Be Afraid of the Dentist

If you are worried about taking your child to the dentist, it can be difficult to take them, since you know that it's going to turn into a whole big production. You may worry about them getting a dental phobia, dreading dealing with their teeth, or just plain melting down every time you have to take them. There are things that you can do that will help your child deal with going to the dentist and make sure that their teeth are healthy for a lifetime  Read More 

What To Do About A Dark Tooth After A Root Canal

Do you have a tooth that needed to have a root canal, and now looks darker than the surrounding teeth? This can often happen due to how the tooth was damaged and as a result of the treatment used to fix it. However, there are ways to fix it so that your tooth looks natural once again. Bleaching Teeth can become dark when the pulp of the tooth is removed during the root canal. Read More 

How to Handle a Knocked-Out Tooth

If you knock out one of your teeth, the tooth may not be a total loss, but you will need to act quickly and appropriately in order to save it. While what you do to protect the tooth is critical, you will also need to draw on the skill of an emergency dentist. The dentist will have the final say on whether the tooth can be saved and what must be done to save it. Read More