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Baby
Baby Teeth
Category: Baby Teeth, Jun 15, 2011

Babies can get their first tooth anywhere between 3-15 months, but most commonly babies cut their first tooth at around 4-9 months. Though baby may be having teething pains earlier, the teeth may not appear for a couple of months. At around 3 months you may notice that your baby is dribbling, this is due to teething and is part of the teething process.

 

Teeth

Signs of teething

  • Rosy cheeks
  • Increased dribbling
  • Tugging at ears and hair
  • Chewing on everything
  • Tender and swollen gums
  • Irritability
  • Disturbed sleep patterns
  • Poor appetite
  • Loose frequent stools
  • Sore and red bottom rash
  • Teething should not cause a fever, if your baby does have a high temperature, consult your doctor.

What to do when your baby is teething

  • Rub your baby’s sore gum’s gently with your finger
  • Give your baby a teething ring, its best to get a soft rubber one or a plastic one with water in it – keep this in the fridge so that the coolness can help minimize baby’s teething pain when they put the teether in their mouth.
  • Apply lemon juice to baby’s gums
  • You can offer a hard and cold piece of fruit or vegetable.
  • Avoid giving baby hard and sharp edged toys because the first thing they will do is put it in their mouth and hence damage their gums and teeth.
  • There are various teething gels available at chemists.

 

What not to do when baby is teething

  • Don’t dip baby’s dummy or teething rings in honey or any sweet foods, especially if your baby is under 12 months of age – this could lead to tooth decay.
  • Do not suck your baby’s dummy and give it back to them – you will be transferring bacteria from your mouth to theirs.
  • Do not use teething gels which contain any aspirin.
  • If you are breastfeeding your baby, do not apply teething gels immediately before feeding as this may numb your baby’s tongue and your areola, hence making feeding difficult for you both.
  • If you plan to use homeopathic granules, make sure you make the correct choice by buying one which is sugar-free. Sugar is a prime cause of tooth decay – you wouldn’t want to be filling your baby’s teeth with that, particularly if it isn’t their first tooth.

 

The importance of baby’s first tooth

All parents need to realize that their baby’s emerging teeth need to be looked after as carefully as their own teeth. Dental decay can result in babies losing teeth as early as 12 months. A condition which is known as “nursing caries” can result from allowing babies to suck on a bottle of milk or sweetened juice for long periods during the day, or last thing at night. If a bedtime bottle is needed, use plain boiled water instead.

 

Caring for your baby’s teeth

  • Start cleaning your baby’s teeth as soon as they appear. Wipe gently with a clean damp cloth when they are having a bath.
  • If your baby is older than six months, progress to brushing their teeth with a small soft bristle toothbrush specially designed for young babies with water.  Brush their teeth twice a day. From around 18 months of age or when your baby has learnt to spit things out, use a pea-sized smear of low fluoride toothpaste.
  • Hold you baby sitting against you facing the bathroom mirror so they can watch you brush your teeth – helpful in their learning.
  • Let your baby play with their toothbrush while they watch you brush your own teeth.
  • Limit the amount of sugary foods in baby’s diet.
  • Avoid giving a bottle for long periods to your baby. Try to give some water in a cup after meals.
  • Watch out for signs of tooth decay regularly and try visiting the dentist for your baby as well as yourself once in a while. If you notice whitish lines along the gum line or brown or yellow spots that don’t brush off, seek medical advice as soon as possible.

 

Baby Senses
Category: Baby Senses, Jun 15, 2011

Physical development is one thing, but how much does your unborn baby know and sense about his interior world, and the outside world?

Sight Sight

How much does an unborn baby see? Given that the environment inside the uterus is quite dark. However, his eyes are certainly capable of seeing by the time he is born, so it’s likely that he would have been aware of light filtering in through his mother’s bare belly, particularly if she was in strong sunlight.

 

 

Hearing Hearing

Regardless of the fact that an unborn baby’s ears are filled with fluid, he can probably still hear from as early as 12 weeks after conception. Studies have shown that a baby does remember sounds they have heard while in the womb. Your voice as well as your partner’s voice will certainly be familiar to your baby from the days in your womb.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Touch Touch

Until recently it was assumed that babies were unable to feel pain, so surgical procedures (such as circumcision) were carried out without anaesthetic. New studies indicate that the levels of stress hormones in babies undergoing surgery are quite high, and doctors have begun to realize that babies feel pain, just like adults.

 

 

 

Taste & SmellTaste and smell

Like his other senses a baby’s senses of taste and smell develop during his time in the womb. Studies have shown that babies develop a preference for tastes or smells based on what the mother consumes during their pregnancy.

 

 

 

EmotionsEmotions

Babies move more in the womb following emotional stress in the mother. Unborn babies of mothers who experienced an earthquake in southern Italy were observed to be agitated for hours afterwards. For this reason it is probably best to avoid negative feeling and stressful situations as much as possible.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Washing Baby’s Hair
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Mop Bath
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The Right Way
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