Is Your Baby Teething Early? The Surprising Link to Prenatal Stress

For most parents, the arrival of the first milk tooth is a milestone celebrated with photos and maybe a little bit of teething-ring relief. Usually, this happens around six months of age. However, new research suggests that if a baby’s teeth start “erupting” much earlier, it might be telling a deeper story about the mother’s pregnancy. A first-of-its-kind study from the University of Rochester, published in Frontiers in Oral Health, has found that high levels of maternal stress hormones during pregnancy are linked to the earlier appearance of baby teeth. The Study: Monitoring Stress and Smiles Researchers followed a group of 142 mothers from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds between 2017 and 2022. To understand the biological environment of the womb, the team measured six different hormones in the mothers’ saliva during their second and third trimesters, including the well-known stress hormone, … Read more

Large Amounts of Fluoride Consumed by Young Children Leads to Fluorosis

A recent study looked at the role of fluoride in young children. It was found that young children who consume large amounts of fluoride through fluoridated water and beverages mixed with flouridated water as well as by swallowing toothpaste with fluoride have an increased chance of developing mild enamel fluorosis. The study noted that all of the fluorosis in the young children seen was mild and that they feel that the oral health of these young children was not adversely affected in anyway. If a child has mild enamel fluorosis there will be barely noticeable faint white lines or streaks on tooth enamel. The researchers used mothers of newborns from eight Iowa hospital postpartum wards between 1992 and 1995 which is known as the Iowa Fluoride Study. A total of 630 children were used in the study and questionnaires were … Read more