Teething

Teething or cold? How to distinguish teething symptoms from an illness

Sometimes teething symptoms look just like a cold. Here's how to tell what your baby's really going through.

By Lisa Bendall

Teething or cold? How to distinguish teething symptoms from an illness

Photo: iStock/LeManna

Typically, first teeth appear between six and eight months of age. Bottom front teeth usually come in first, followed by the top front teeth. You’ll normally see the first molar soon after your baby turns one. That amounts to many months of second-guessing teething symptoms.

It's not always teething

Joana Ramos-Jorge, a paediatric dentist in Brazil, recently conducted an eight-month study of baby tooth eruptions and teething symptoms. In her practice, Ramos-Jorge had noticed that parents frequently came to her seeking dental care for their teething babies, when in reality the children were ill with something else, like a virus.

Her study found that symptoms associated with teething included rashes, drooling, runny noses, short-lived diarrhea, crankiness, loss of appetite and mild temperatures. The symptoms were never severe, and they weren’t prolonged, often beginning the day a pearly white popped through and lasting until the day after.

Babies with illnesses experienced more persistent symptoms.

Teething or cold? Watch for symptom longevity

Carl Cummings, a Montreal paediatrician, agrees with this assessment. “The longer the symptom lasts, the less likely it is to be from teething,” he says. If a baby is fretful four or five nights instead of one or two, if diarrhea continues for more than a day, or if a fever is higher than 38.5°c, you should be calling the doctor instead of blaming an incisor.

“Teething is the interpretation you arrive at after you’re pretty sure it’s nothing else,” Cummings adds.

Try acetaminophen

In general, a baby who chomps everything in sight and is drooling like nobody’s business is most likely cutting a tooth. For discomfort caused by a mild fever, first try giving your baby acetaminophen. If she’s teething, she’ll feel better. (And if it doesn’t provide relief, something else is likely going on.) Cummings also suggests offering chilled teething rings and comforting your baby by carrying her around.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends that parents not use teething gels or tablets because they pose a risk to your baby's health.

One to try:

Genexa infant acetaminophen, teething or sick Merchant

This easy-to-pour bottle acetaminophen suspension for infants is easy to deliver thanks to a thicker, tasty organic blueberry flavor and absolutely no artificial fillers. It's also a must-have on our newborn checklist.



This article was originally published on May 01, 2018

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