What is Crown Dentistry? Do Children Need Dental Crowns?
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What is Crown Dentistry And Do Children Need Dental Crowns?

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What is Crown Dentistry And Do Children Need Dental Crowns?

What is Crown Dentistry?

In crown dentistry, dentists put on a tooth-shaped cap that restores a tooth that has become weak, cracked, decaying, or worn out. Additionally, dental professionals cover root-treated teeth and dental implants with dental crowns.
Pediatric dental crowns are made of a variety of materials, including metal, resin, and porcelain, and, with good maintenance, can last between five and 15 years.

Do Children Need Dental Crowns?

Given the fact that infant teeth will eventually fall out, it seems sense that dental crowns are seldom constructed for them.

However, there are specific situations in which a youngster could need a crown to protect teeth. They are:

  1. If a youngster has a baby molar tooth that is severely broken down
  2. If they had a procedure to the nerve of a broken baby molar tooth.
  3. The kids have significant wear from erosion, grinding, or both
  4. If they have improperly grown teeth
  5. As a temporary fix because since they are too young to develop a permanent adult crown

 

The first two are unquestionably the most frequent justifications for dental crowns on kids. The alternative to utilizing a crown is extraction, which may result in issues if a baby tooth is removed too soon, such as crowding of the permanent teeth as they start to erupt, misalignment or tilting of the baby teeth, or obstruction. This might demand additional treatment including orthodontic treatments.
By covering the decayed tooth with crowns, the baby tooth can continue to serve as a temporary replacement until the permanent teeth have fully developed.

Are Children’s Crown Different?

A pediatric dental clinic knows that children tend to have short attention spans, tiny mouths, large amounts of saliva, and a strong dislike of going to the dentist. It is not at all practical to make a crown in one hour, thus a different strategy is used.

Children’s dental crowns are not created in a laboratory as those for adults are, thus no impression is required.
Despite the fact that the majority of them are made from various metals, they are referred to as metal crowns or “stainless steel crowns.” Your kid’s dentist measures the affected tooth in order to choose which one would suit best since they are already created in various sizes.

The Procedure

The use of “Laughing gas” and Novocain during a stainless-steel crown surgery may be advised by your child’s pediatric dentist. The laughing gas is very minor kind of conscious sedation that eases anxiety or jitters. Your youngster stays awake the whole time. For a pain-free stainless steel crown surgery, Novocain is injected into the gums around the decaying tooth.

First the height and sides of the tooth are somewhat decreased to create room for the crown. The crown is modified to fit the tooth and then glued in place. On deciduous molars, these kinds of dental crowns have extremely high success rates and the majority remain in place until the tooth is naturally lost.

Since your pediatric dentist uses Novocain, your kid should refrain from eating until the anesthetic wears off to prevent unintentionally biting their lip, cheek, or tongue. They may eat and drink normally when it has subsided, but the crown can be irritating. After the operation, they could have some discomfort for a day or two, but this can be treated with over-the-counter painkillers like Children’s Tylenol or Children’s Ibuprofen.

If you have any questions about your child’s oral health please contact Dr. Lisi at Kids Pediatric Dentistry in Allen, Texas. Our specialists will be happy to help you with any dental related questions.

 

Further Reading on Dental Crowns for Children