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laundry_queen

(8,646 posts)
23. +10000000000
Wed Mar 7, 2012, 12:58 AM
Mar 2012

Sheeit, I was so tired of this particular bit of ignorance I had to counter with my children. 3 out of 4 of my kids required dental surgery (ie, fillings, caps and extractions under general anesthesia) by the time they were 3. 2 out of 4 had severe decay. All had cavities. All have had an absess (thanks to their 'solution' of caps that have a 50% chance of absessing). With my first 3 all I heard was 'you need to not breastfeed them when they are asleep. You need to not breastfeed them at night' etc. Funny, how my one child who didn't need surgery nursed at night more than all the other ones. The only difference was she wasn't very demonstrative so didn't kiss us as much. Apparently, that strep mutans bacteria gets transferred from the parents to the child from things like kissing, 'testing' food, cleaning off a paci by sucking on it, etc. In fact, I didn't have any cavities at all, ever, growing up and when I got together with my children's father, suddenly I had cavities constantly. WTF?

Later on I found out that he probably carried the bacteria, passed it to me and I passed it to our children. Add into that non-flouridated water and a genetic predisposition for malformed teeth (on my kids' dad's side) and my kids had teeth that ERUPTED rotten. Where I live I had a public health nurse that did dental for kids at risk and she says she had never quite seen anything like my youngest child's teeth. One month they were under the gums, the next month they were erupted and rotting away. So I asked her, just to 'test' her, "Could that possibly be from night nursing?" and she laughed and said, "GOD no. And don't let anyone ever tell you that either." She said it was likely when the teeth were forming when I was pregnant.

The solution for decay? Flouride varnish. Not the stuff the dentists give you, it's more like a resin that is 'painted' on the teeth and it sticks to the teeth for a day or so. My kids started getting flouride varnish (given out here at the health unit for kids at risk of decay) and the rate of decay slowed dramatically. As in, only a couple of cavities in the years since the varnish. My youngest had her 1 year bottom molars come in rotted (as aforementioned) but her front teeth were beautiful and strong, so the nurse said there is no way her decay had to do with nursing. We kept up the varnish and she's only ever needed those particular molars fixed, everything else has been fine except for an absess from the capped molar, so that got pulled, but didn't require a general anesthesia. But no extra cavities at all on any of her other non-malformed teeth. And since we've moved to an area that now has flouridated water, we've had zero problems.

I did a lot of research about breastfeeding and cavities after my first child's dental surgery and found out that most kids never have an issue. It CAN cause an issue if the teeth are not brushed with flouride toothpaste as they erupt, but I always brused my kids' teeth with flouride toothpaste, I even bought kids' type flouridated rinse and my babies had their mouths often wiped out with a washcloth after they fell asleep at the breast. I was super careful with all of my kids, especially after my first who lost all of her front teeth with her surgery.

Oh, and I'd like to add that while my kids breastfed for a long time, they never walked around with sippy cups full of juice. They all don't particularly care for juice, and I never fed them sugary things. So I think the cause of the rise has a lot to do with lack of insurance and preventative care, as well as the addition of sugar in even traditionally 'non-sugary' foods and also a reduced use of anti-biotics. Plus, when I was younger it was a big thing for kids to go in and get 'sealants'. Now it's hard to find dentists that even DO sealants, because it's not good business if your clients get preventative care and don't need you to fill their cavities anymore. It's probably a lot of issues that are all converging at the same time causing the rate of cavities to go up.

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I read an article a few weeks ago that said dentists give too many fillings tridim Mar 2012 #1
Amen. "Brownies" are not cavities but require the same amount of treatment. kickysnana Mar 2012 #28
In the last 15 years or so, I saw more parents giving their children juice shraby Mar 2012 #2
Something I've noticed in the last several years is that kids tote a sippy cup Arkansas Granny Mar 2012 #14
and many people have no dental coverage SoCalDem Mar 2012 #3
...and red teeth! Do you remember the red teeth? Cerridwen Mar 2012 #10
I remember the red "pill" SoCalDem Mar 2012 #11
We had too much fun to be embarrassed. Cerridwen Mar 2012 #12
They still do that here in Canada laundry_queen Mar 2012 #25
Lack of access to dental care Horse with no Name Mar 2012 #4
Probably lack of insurance - we have coverage but we still end up paying quite a bit TBF Mar 2012 #5
NYTimes had similar article, I still cannot believe it, even a toothbrush twice a day would help,,,, benld74 Mar 2012 #6
too much pop, not enough milk. Odin2005 Mar 2012 #7
We don't need to regulate sugar. We need to restrict soda. Kids suck on it kestrel91316 Mar 2012 #8
Bottled/filtered water too. (No flouride.) /nt TheMadMonk Mar 2012 #9
I was thinking bottled water, too. The fluoride issue. Where is PCIntern on this?... truth2power Mar 2012 #20
He is incorrect about breastfeeding. vanlassie Mar 2012 #13
+10000000000 laundry_queen Mar 2012 #23
Maybe the drastic thing that ohheckyeah Mar 2012 #15
How about a nice yogurt for lunch.... Bigmack Mar 2012 #19
I don't like it. ohheckyeah Mar 2012 #22
My kids didn't eat much sugar laundry_queen Mar 2012 #24
I guess we have different experiences. ohheckyeah Mar 2012 #26
Bottled water without fluoride? Warpy Mar 2012 #16
Pottenger's cat experiment Recursion Mar 2012 #17
lack of dental insurance Marrah_G Mar 2012 #18
My daughter got a hole in her front tooth when she was a baby. Arugula Latte Mar 2012 #21
I doubt it was from breast feeding vanlassie Mar 2012 #27
Maybe so. Arugula Latte Mar 2012 #29
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