№ 43 · CARE
First teeth: when to start oral care — and why 'they will fall out anyway' is dangerous
13 يونيو 2026 · QDRO
Tooth decay is the most common chronic disease of childhood worldwide. It affects one in four children before age five — despite being one of the most preventable pathological processes in medicine. Its prevalence has a single explanation: parents not knowing when to start, what to use, and how.
Where oral care begins: before the first tooth
Paediatric dentistry is unanimous: oral hygiene should start before the first tooth erupts. A soft damp cloth or silicone finger brush is used to wipe gums and tongue after feeding. Goal: building a habit and mechanically reducing bacterial load.
The first tooth usually erupts between four and seven months. From that moment: a soft toothbrush and a smear of fluoride toothpaste. Per AAPD (2023) and AAP (2020) guidelines:
- First tooth to age 3: fluoride toothpaste 1,000–1,500 ppm, smear/rice grain amount (~0.1 g).
- Ages 3–6: fluoride toothpaste 1,000–1,500 ppm, pea-sized amount (~0.25 g).
- Age 6+: standard fluoride toothpaste, standard amount.
Why "they will fall out anyway" is not an argument
Primary teeth perform functions that "temporary" understates:
- Chewing and nutrition: pain from decay disrupts eating and affects growth.
- Speech: primary teeth participate in forming consonants.
- Space holders: maintain space for permanent teeth. Premature loss → neighbouring teeth shift → crowding of permanent teeth.
- Bacterial transmission: S. mutans from a decayed primary tooth colonises permanent teeth before they even erupt.
Primary tooth decay does not resolve on its own. It is a source of infection that hurts, disrupts nutrition, and seeds permanent teeth with cariogenic bacteria before they emerge.
How bacteria transfer from parents to children
Streptococcus mutans — the principal cariogenic bacterium — is transmitted vertically from mother to child through saliva. Sharing spoons, licking a pacifier, kissing on the mouth: these are the main transmission routes. Parents with active caries significantly increase a child's colonisation risk.
Research shows: the later initial S. mutans colonisation occurs, the lower the subsequent caries risk. Delayed colonisation is achievable: thorough parental hygiene, xylitol use (reduces salivary S. mutans levels), and separate utensils for the child all contribute.
Practical steps
- Gum hygiene from birth: damp cloth or finger brush after each feeding.
- Fluoride toothpaste from the first tooth: a smear is safe — fluorosis risk at this quantity is minimal.
- Parents brush until age 6–8: children cannot manage technique independently before this.
- No bedtime bottle: milk or juice next to sleeping teeth = decay. If needed — water only.
- First dental visit with the first tooth, no later than 12 months.
- No shared utensils: reduces S. mutans transmission.
Sources:
- AAPD Policy on Early Childhood Caries (2023). https://www.aapd.org
- AAP. (2020). Fluoride Use in Caries Prevention. Pediatrics. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2020-034637
- PMC12145511 — Review of Early Childhood Caries (2025)
- Cochrane review: Preventing dental caries in children. Marinho VCC et al. (updated 2024)
- Tanzer JM, Livingston J, Thompson AM. (2001). The microbiology of primary dental caries in humans. J Dent Educ. PMID 11699974
- Saethre-Sundli HB, Wang NJ, Wigen TI. (2020). Do enamel and dentine caries at 5 years predict caries development in newly erupted teeth? Acta Odontol Scand. PMID 32189539