Baby Teething Age Varies From Child To Child

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Baby Teething Age Varies From Child To Child

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007    Subscribe To Our Feed

There is set timetable for a baby to begin cutting teeth, but typically the infant teething age is determined, in part, by hereditary factors. The average age is somewhere between six and nine months for an infant to begin showing signs of teething, but it can be earlier or later. Regardless of the age at which the infant begins teething, it can take up to two years in total for all 20 of the baby teeth to work their way through the gums.

Many pediatricians point out that by the time an infant is born, the roots for their baby teeth are already formed, waiting for the opportunity to work their way out through the gums. There have been occasions when infants have been born with two or more teeth already showing through the gums. While a typical infant teething age may be hard to pin down, the age any child begins teething is marked by certain common symptoms. An excess of saliva is one of the most common, while an urge to chew on anything that comes near it mouth also marks the beginning of the infant teething age.

With some infants the infant teething age may not start until they are close to a year old and pediatricians stress that being early or slow to begin teething is not a reflection on the health and well-being of the infant. Like many other occurrences in life, teething is an unpredictable process, but it is common that teeth grow out in pairs.

All children will cut teeth and for some there will no pain or discomfort and for others the process will go by hardly noticed. For the few that have a difficult time having the teeth break through the gum tissue there are many treatments available at home that can help the baby and the parents through the infant teething age. Massaging the gums is one of the proven methods to help relieve the pain, whether it is with a clean finger or a damp gauze swab.

Offer your child something firm to chew on such as a raw carrot stick or a rusk . Or you could try a chilled teething ring. Try to avoid giving your baby medicated teething gels that contain local anaesthetics if possible as the relief is very short lived and they can end up causing allergies.

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