Mouth hygiene and mouth sepsis . almostany character, in children of certain tem-peraments, may be followed by more orless general systemic disturbances, withelevation of temperature, vomiting, diar-rhoea, bronchitis, and other catarrhal con-ditions, or reflex nervous phenomena,like strabismus,—squinting or cross-eye,—twitching of the facial muscles, rollingof the eyes, convulsions, or meningitis,—inflammation of the brain. Normal Primary Dentition—cuttingof the milk teeth—begins between thefifth and eighth months after birth, andterminates between the twenty-fourth andthirty-second months. Th
Mouth hygiene and mouth sepsis . almostany character, in children of certain tem-peraments, may be followed by more orless general systemic disturbances, withelevation of temperature, vomiting, diar-rhoea, bronchitis, and other catarrhal con-ditions, or reflex nervous phenomena,like strabismus,—squinting or cross-eye,—twitching of the facial muscles, rollingof the eyes, convulsions, or meningitis,—inflammation of the brain. Normal Primary Dentition—cuttingof the milk teeth—begins between thefifth and eighth months after birth, andterminates between the twenty-fourth andthirty-second months. The followingtable represents the average period of theeruption—cutting—of the various classesof teeth which constitute the temporarydenture: The central incisors, fron 5 to 8 months after lateral incisors, from 7 to 10 months after first molars, from 12 to 16 months after cuspids (eye-teeth), from 14 to 20 months after second molars, from 20 to 32 months after Fig. 1. Head of Infant, Front View, showing Primary Dentition at aboutthe Seventh Month. Fig.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmouth, bookyear1912