I've been reading everything I can find on the internet about the
enamel problem, but I didn't find much information. The only unusual
stress during my pregnancy was at 7 months, when my older son had to go
to the emergency room in an ambulance. My husband, my older son, and I
all have normal teeth. My younger son has been very healthy. He did
have jaundice during his first week, but it was never serious enough to
require treatment. He was exclusively breastfed for the first year,
with very few solid foods (my older son has serious food allergies and
this was a preventive measure), and breastfed for the second year as
well. He did have a fever for a few days when he was an infant, I
can't remember exactly how old. He's never had fluoride supplements,
we drink bottled water, and I didn't even use fluoride toothpaste on
him until he was about 5.
I'm wondering whether I should take him to an academic practice. We go
now to a suburban pediatric dental practice with two dentists. I'm
worried about the health of these molars, and about whether other
permanent teeth will be affected. His baby teeth are beautiful, white
and straight.
Any information or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Frequently it is difficult to pinpoint the exact cause of focal
hypoplasias. Occasionally severe fluorosis will cause something like
this, but it is unusual in first molars. There are also some genetic
conditions causing hypoplasia, but with most of these you or his dad
would be aware of a family history.
Absent that, it is unlikely the other teeth will be similarly affected,
unless there was a chronic excess fluoride ingestion.
Steve
>
--
Cut the nonsense to reply
> ... He's never had fluoride supplements,
> we drink bottled water, and I didn't even use fluoride toothpaste on
> him until he was about 5.
Did you check the label of the bottled water? Some are worse than
fluoridated tap water, regarding the fluoride content (apart from other
contaminants and bacteria).
If the label says nothing about fluoride, that doesn´t mean it has none!
Best,
Peter
--
-History of fluorine, fluoride and fluoridation-:
--- http://www.fluoride-history.de/index.htm ---
----------------------------------------------------
Thank you for responding.
Coal heated buildings, such as many NYC schools emit fluoride air
emissions. Other fluoride emitters are power plants and other
factories.
Living near these buildings increases fluoride intake
Inhaling ocean mist (which is fluoridated at about 1.2 or 1.4 ppm
fluoride) is another air borne source.
Baby food meat products have lots of fluoride in them from the
mechanical de-boning process which gets fluoride-rich bone dust in the
finished product.
Some grape juices have very high fluoride levels because of fluoride
containing pesticide residues that remain on the fruit.
Teflon cooking pots and utensils pass fluoride into foods. And some
medicines contain fluoride.
Now that sulfuryl fluoride has replaced sulfuryl bromide as a fumigant,
lots of fluoride in many more products.
See: "How Much Fluoride Did You Eat Today?"
http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/11749/112620
There are many hidden sources of fluoride. And as Peter said, you have
to call the bottled water company to find out if there is or is not a
fluoride content. There's no requirement to put fluoride content in
any foods - unless it's been purposely added
NYS Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation
http://www.orgsites.com/ny/nyscof
> Of course, the hypoplastic teeth don't have to be fluorosis. However,
> since your signed on as NY Mom, it's possible you've used cold mist
> humidifiers with tap water (NYC and 70% of NY State is fluoridated).
>
> Coal heated buildings, such as many NYC schools emit fluoride air
> emissions. Other fluoride emitters are power plants and other
> factories.
Do you really belive that coal-burning furnaces are still legal in NYC?
My understanding is that coal-burning furnaces, as well as residential
incinerators have been illegal in the 5 boroughs for many years.
I will try to find a reference.
Steve
> Living near these buildings increases fluoride intake
>
> Inhaling ocean mist (which is fluoridated at about 1.2 or 1.4 ppm
> fluoride) is another air borne source.
>
> Baby food meat products have lots of fluoride in them from the
> mechanical de-boning process which gets fluoride-rich bone dust in the
> finished product.
>
> Some grape juices have very high fluoride levels because of fluoride
> containing pesticide residues that remain on the fruit.
>
> Teflon cooking pots and utensils pass fluoride into foods. And some
> medicines contain fluoride.
>
> Now that sulfuryl fluoride has replaced sulfuryl bromide as a fumigant,
> lots of fluoride in many more products.
>
> See: "How Much Fluoride Did You Eat Today?"
>
> http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/11749/112620
>
> There are many hidden sources of fluoride. And as Peter said, you have
> to call the bottled water company to find out if there is or is not a
> fluoride content. There's no requirement to put fluoride content in
> any foods - unless it's been purposely added
>
> NYS Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation
> http://www.orgsites.com/ny/nyscof
>
--
Mark & Steven Bornfeld DDS
http://www.dentaltwins.com
Brooklyn, NY
718-258-5001
> nys...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>> Of course, the hypoplastic teeth don't have to be fluorosis. However,
>> since your signed on as NY Mom, it's possible you've used cold mist
>> humidifiers with tap water (NYC and 70% of NY State is fluoridated).
>>
>> Coal heated buildings, such as many NYC schools emit fluoride air
>> emissions. Other fluoride emitters are power plants and other
>> factories.
>
>
>
> Do you really belive that coal-burning furnaces are still legal in
> NYC? My understanding is that coal-burning furnaces, as well as
> residential incinerators have been illegal in the 5 boroughs for many
> years.
> I will try to find a reference.
>
> Steve
I quickly found this reference, wherin the remaining 114 remaining
coal-burning furnaces were to be converted--during the Giuliani
administration.
I do not know when this may have been accomplished, so it is possible
that during this child's early years, some coal-burning furnaces were
still on-line:
http://www.nyc.gov/html/records/rwg/html/2001a/weekly/wkly0129.html
Steve
Is this condition common?
--
~+--~+--~+--~+--~+--
Stephen [What's a Temporary?], D.D.S.
Michigan, USA
....................................................
This posting is intended for informational or conversational purposes only.
Always seek the opinion of a licensed dental professional before acting on
the advice or opinion expressed here. Only a dentist who has examined you
in person can diagnose your problems and make decisions which will affect
your health.
......................
"NY Mom" <km...@speakeasy.net> wrote in message
news:1116514876.4...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
It occurred to me to wonder whether, if my younger son's orthodontic
treatment requires extraction of teeth and the first molars turn out to
be the only hypoplastic ones, they might take those out and leave the
good ones?
--
~+--~+--~+--~+--~+--
Stephen [What's a Temporary?], D.D.S.
Michigan, USA
....................................................
This posting is intended for informational or conversational purposes only.
Always seek the opinion of a licensed dental professional before acting on
the advice or opinion expressed here. Only a dentist who has examined you
in person can diagnose your problems and make decisions which will affect
your health.
......................
"NY Mom" <km...@speakeasy.net> wrote in message
news:1116516167....@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
--
~+--~+--~+--~+--~+--
Stephen [What's a Temporary?], D.D.S.
Michigan, USA
....................................................
This posting is intended for informational or conversational purposes only.
Always seek the opinion of a licensed dental professional before acting on
the advice or opinion expressed here. Only a dentist who has examined you
in person can diagnose your problems and make decisions which will affect
your health.
......................
"NY Mom" <km...@speakeasy.net> wrote in message
news:1116516488.3...@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
Yes. It sometimes affects multiple teeth, but probably more frequently
just one or two teeth.
Have his lower or upper permanent incisors come in yet?
It's way too soon to worry about this.
It's true that I haven't seen how bad the first molars look, but these
are important teeth. The decision as to whether teeth have to be
extracted will be based on what the orthodontists call an arch-length
analysis. If you get a consultation, this is certainly one of the
issues you will discuss.
Nah. Don't worry about it. Do what I did--worry about my kid's school
and teachers.
I'm
> wondering whether my son is looking at a lifetime of serious dental
> procedures.
>
I doubt it, but no one knows for sure at this point. Every once in a
while I will see a youngster with poor enamel formation on certain
teeth. The first molars seem to be the most commonly affected. Usually
I can deal with it by using bonded filling materials while they are
young and then I might crown any badly affected teeth around 18.
Since nothing lasts forever, they will need further treatment at some
point later in life, but I don't think I would use the word "serious".
In very severe cases, the first molars could be extracted and the second
molars guided into the first molar position, but I can't recall seeing
one this bad in my 26 years of practice.
Fawks
Since the lower central incisors and the 6-year molars begin to
mineralize at about the same time (in infancy), it is possible that an
event that caused a problem in mineralization of the molars (a high
fever, for instance) could also cause a problem for the incisors.
Typically, this is seen as a horizontal band around the surface of the
incisor(s). If the lower centrals come in clean, it increases the
chance that the first molars are an isolated problem.