Andtototoo
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2010
- Messages
- 2,996
Well, dd really needed braces, so when our dentist suggested it, it was a "No kidding" response from me. Now, she did start quite young and go through 2 stages. People thought we were crazy, but I realized that dd had my sister's mouth and my sister had gone through only stage 2 and her teeth weren't what I'd call "quite right" even after all the ortho. So when (30 years) later, the ortho suggested 2 stages, I agreed. My dd has a MUCH better mouth than my sister, so it was worth it to me.
I do agree, however, that there is often a lot of pressure for ortho. My dentist said it's because with floridated water, better toothpaste and so on, there is not as much need for filling cavities. LOL
That said, I have a friend who had some minor overlapping on her top teeth and the dentist kept urging her to get them fixed. He told her that while it was minor now, in his experience it was going to get much worse and she'd live to regret not getting it fixed. She got very angry with him and switched dentists and told him straight up she didn't want to hear about ortho. Well, 15 years down the line, it turns out her first dentist was correct -- over time, that overlapping got much much worse, her teeth cut into her gums and the crookedness is very noticeable. She regrets now not listening to the dentist back then -- when she had dental insurance with an adult ortho provision that would have paid for 90% of the cost.
I do agree, however, that there is often a lot of pressure for ortho. My dentist said it's because with floridated water, better toothpaste and so on, there is not as much need for filling cavities. LOL
That said, I have a friend who had some minor overlapping on her top teeth and the dentist kept urging her to get them fixed. He told her that while it was minor now, in his experience it was going to get much worse and she'd live to regret not getting it fixed. She got very angry with him and switched dentists and told him straight up she didn't want to hear about ortho. Well, 15 years down the line, it turns out her first dentist was correct -- over time, that overlapping got much much worse, her teeth cut into her gums and the crookedness is very noticeable. She regrets now not listening to the dentist back then -- when she had dental insurance with an adult ortho provision that would have paid for 90% of the cost.

I'm actually scared about this one - he's 9 in a little over a month and his baby teeth still aren't loose (but he's lost all his other teeth that he should have lost by this age).
We're hoping he actually has to have ortho because that would mean he has adult front teeth and that they're lurking way up and that he doesn't have to have implants. They're doing the x-rays next week.
