The boy with the extra set of teeth

Posted on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 3:30 PM PT

By Kavita Varma-White

At the age of 5, my son Jayan had a routine set of dental X-rays that showed a disturbing fact.

The X-rays revealed that he possessed not one, not two, but three sets of front teeth. There were his baby teeth, his permanent teeth and in between, an extra set. A bonus pair, if you will.

I reacted the way any parent would upon discovering their child has an extra body part:
I freaked. “He has what?!” I yelled at my husband, who had taken him to the appointment. (Having a general fear of dentistry, I avoid going whenever possible.)

Image: Body Odd

Humans are normally born with 20 baby teeth and have 32 permanent teeth. As it turns out, Jayan is the proud owner of supernumerary teeth, which are teeth additional to the regular number of chompers and can be found in almost any region of the horseshoe-shaped dental arch. They are most common in the central incisors, or front teeth.

Supernumerary teeth are often hereditary, although pediatric dentist Patrick Arnold of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., says it’s hard to tell what causes them. “A portion of the developing tissue from early on may get pushed off and a tooth bud might split. Or, there also might be hyperactivity of the dental lamina, which is the precursor to a tooth.”

It's also unclear how common supernumerary teeth are in children. The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry cites a 1999 report in the Journal of Canadian Dental Association, where in a survey of 2,000 British schoolchildren, researchers found that supernumerary teeth were present in 0.8 percent of kids who still had baby teeth. Of the children who already had their permanent teeth, 2.1 percent had supernumeraries.

Arnold, the dentist who diagnosed our son, has not seen a lot of supernumerary teeth in his eight-year practice. He estimates about 1 percent of his patients are affected.

After discovering Jayan’s sharklike extra row of teeth, the dentist explained the likely course of treatment.

First, Jayan’s baby front teeth would have to be extracted prematurely. Second, we’d have to wait for the supernumerary teeth to come in. Hopefully, they would appear before the permanent teeth. (An unappealing side effect: When the supernumerary comes in, it is commonly not a fully formed tooth, but rather a malformed, peglike tooth.) Once his ivories presented themselves, the supernumerary teeth would have to be pulled, making room for the permanent teeth.

If the permanent teeth edged ahead of the supernumeraries, Jayan would face a miserable operation of oral maxillofacial surgery to remove the extra teeth.

Fortunately, fate stepped in. A few months after the diagnosis, Jayan had a playground collision that loosened both of his front teeth. That afternoon, with my husband inconveniently out of town, I watched Arnold stick a huge needle in my son’s mouth to numb it, and then pull out both teeth.

It is truly amazing how losing the front teeth completely transforms a child’s face. The babyness leaves and they are instantly … older. I cried at the sight of my toothless boy, who I felt had to unfairly grow up too fast.

Meanwhile, Jayan, 5, enjoyed celebrity status in his kindergarten class, as no one had lost both front teeth yet. Most kids don’t lose their first tooth until age 6; they commonly don’t lose both front teeth before age 7.

It also helped that the Tooth Fairy, who is a sucker for dentist-extracted teeth, left $10 under the pillow, rather than her usual fare of $1 per tooth.

Shortly afterward, we moved to a new city and took Jayan to a new dentist. Fresh X-rays showed in the past year the supernumerary teeth had made significant movement. While one is coming down in the correct position, the other one seems to be pointing backwards, possibly requiring surgery. Only time will tell which direction it takes.

As we play the waiting game, we’ll celebrate yet another holiday season where the theme song in our house is the familiar tune, “All I Want for Christmas Is My Two Front Teeth.”

Comments

You'd be a pauper if you were my sister's mother.  She had 22 teeth pulled, not including her wisdom teeth -- all four of them, too!
My son, too, is a 'shark boy'. He has had 12 extra teeth removed in the past 8 yrs. Each time that we think that they're all done, another 2 or 3 will appear on the x-ray. He's going to be 18 soon, and they're still coming.
Kavita, I've been interested in this for some time now, after reading reports of elderly women seeking medical attention for jaw pain only to find on xray that they were growing extra teeth. I believe this is possibly evolution in action,as a response to our increasingly longer life span.
My son was also born with an extra set of teeth. His, however, were not located in the normal locations (the "horseshoe" position you indicated) but were all over the place. Needless to say, He had quite a bit of oral surgery at a very young age and wore braces for many years. In fact, when he went into the navy at age 19 he was still wearing braces. I felt so sorry for him but he ended up with a beautiful  mouth. My daughter had 2 extra teeth and when she lost 1, the teeth fell into place by themselves. Funny how that worked. I think it is genetic.
I don't think this is as uncommon as one might think.  I had a complete extra set of wisdom teeth both on top and on bottom and had to have them surgically removed when I was in 8th grade.  My sister also had extra wisdom teeth.  My oldest son, who is 9, had an one extra tooth in the front which we found at a routine dental exam.  He did end up having to have both his baby and the extra tooth removed by the oral surgeon which really wasn't that bad.  He does have braces now because that bugger of a permanent tooth decided that it didn't need to move.  He has taken this all in stride and it really has not bothered him as much as one might think.  There were a couple other kids in his class who also had to get braces so that made him feel better.  Good Luck!
I love the word supernumerary!  We see this every once in a while here at the dental clinic I work at.  Very interesting stuff!
LEAVE HIS TEETH ALONE. If they don't cause problems, then why put him through the trauma and agony of pulling them?

My permanent teeth grew in when I was five, behind my baby teeth. That was cool, because I was the only kid in my class who never lost their front teeth. My parents and dentist insisted on pulling some of them early, though, which was both excruciating and traumatic. I hate the dentist as a result.

Leave well enough alone, until it's time and you are certain that intervention is needed.
Speaking from personal experience, other than your own discomfort, your child will likely just remember this as a great story.  

I had 1 extra front tooth (surgically extracted - growing up instead of down) and 2 extra wisdom teeth for 6 total.  No big deal, now just a great story that gets amazed look at work.
I remember a boy in our neighborhood when I was growing up, a friend of my brothers, who had the same thing occur. He had 18 teeth pulled over time, braces, the works. He is in his forties now, and has the most gorgeous set of teeth! The silver lining.
Best of luck.
I too am an "oddity" - I was a tongue thruster when swallowing and as a result, when my permanent teeth were coming in, they completely flipped around - so the front of my teeth are actually the back of my teeth!  I was 18 when I had my braces put in and my orthodontist made me feel like a freak by having all the other doctors in the complex come and "take a look" at what they had only read about in text books.
Hopefully your son will be too young to remember!
I am 72 years old and had an extra set of teeth.  When I was growing up (in a very poor family), dental surgery was a rare thing, and orthodontics almost non-existent.  Luckily, I lived near the University of Texas Dental Branch in Houston, and they took my case as a teaching aid.  The second set did start growing in with many of them pointing back and down, so there were several surgeries.  I wasn't traumatized at all, and I have no fear of dentists because of the excellent care I received by extraordinary professors and students.  They worked on Saturdays and after school so I didn't miss any school time.

I don't have perfectly straight teeth, since my permanent teeth turned out to be too large for my jaws, but wire braces for a couple years put everything back in place.  I still have healthy strong teeth, all of them, and people tell me I have a great smile.

Good luck to you and your family.  If people need expensive dental care and cannot afford it, contact a teaching college to see if they have programs to assist.
Could be worse.  I had my wisdom teeth removed at sixteen, only to be told at twenty nine that I had to have them removed again!
It was painful enough to have my wisdom teeth removed. I can't imagine having entire set removed. Well, thank goodness he's young and can recuperate quickly.
I actually had that! its not as bad as they make it seem though. I guess my "extra" 2 front teeth were above my permanent teeth, so i had to have the oral surgery to get them removed. I was in third grade and had it done on a Friday, took to weekend to recover (although after the initial surgery day i was pretty much fine)and was back at school on Monday. Now at 22 you would have never known.
I remember having supernumerary front teeth as a child.  Unfortunatly for my mother, the dentist hadn't caught this fact in advance.  I remember losing my baby teeth and having what we thought were permanent teeth grow in soon after.  On a family vacation to Disney, one of my front teeth fell out without any real provocation.  My mother panicked, having no idea why my permanent teeth were falling out.  Thankfully she was quickly put at ease upon our return home by our family dentist.  I remember being amused by the situation, including my mothers panick.
Namaste Kavita,

Don't worry - see the movie "Coneheads". When Beldar goest to Dentist, now that is a problem . . .
Sounds like genetic mutation to me. Must be a pain to brush and floss.
There really is a heredity component to having the extra set of teeth.  My brother was born with extra front teeth and he had them in his mouth along with his permanent teeth.  We used him as a hole punch as one of the canines was in the middle roof of his mouth and was good for punching holes in paper.

Years later while doing family history research I found a new line to our family about which someone had written a book. In it was a story about a great-great uncle who "amazed townfolk" by being able to lift heavy objects tied to a rope- with his extra set of teeth!
My daughter was precocious in that she had all of her baby teeth including the first molar by the time she was one year old. Thankfully, she was a happy baby and teething bothered her very little.
The day after starting Kindergarten, at age 5, she lost her first bottom tooth; the second, a day later. The others fell with prompt regularity. Her permanent teeth came in without a hitch.
She has no wisdom teeth at all. Of course, she gets teased unmercifully for this! But she has the last laugh... No painful surgery for her!
I'm sure he's a cute baby but that's so weird.  I hope it's not the Anti-Christ.  I've heard stories about the Anti-Christ having extra teeth or was it one tooth in his near his throat.
I had this also. When I was in first grade I had my baby teeth pulled and the extra set. It took more than three years for my permanent teeth to come in and then only with the help of braces. Three years without front teeth was miserable.
I had the same front two supernumerary teeth. I needed surgery and then braces. I don't remember it really being a big deal to me when I was a child. I'm sure he will be fine.

As a side note, in an apparent attempt to compensate me for having extra front teeth, I never got one permanent upper first molar. The baby tooth came out when I was 17 and I had to have a bridge put in.
I had the opposite - not enough teeth.  I was the kid that always had the retainer with the fake teeth.  I was never shy about it - and it was funny to all of my classmates from 3rd Grade on up - I got to be a beaver, a vampire, etc by manipulating the fake teeth..  I had braces numerous times, oral surgery, etc.  And, as a bonus, I got to miss school a lot.  Your child will be okay - at least if you keep a sense of humor about it.
Most people are paupers when it comes to dental care these days.  So often employers don't have dental plans (or vision, either), and there's no other way to pay for it than through the nose.
This is outta control funny!!!!!  Poor baby.....

I also had a set of "extra" front teeth.  My parents were poor and couldn't afford the dental visits required to correct the matter.  I've paid a mint to dentists and orthodontists as an adult and the pain of the surgery and orthodontia required has been awful (you think YOU'VE got a fear of the dentist)!  Jayan will be lucky to have this corrected as a child when the bones/teeth in his mouth aren't set by puberty.
For me, I never developed six of my adult teeth and at 31 years old, i still have 4 of my baby teeth.  My oldest son, at 5 was diagnosed with the same problem and will need work done to make his baby teeth last.  
HA HA!! THIS IS YOUR KID!!
My son had an extra tooth & the dentist recommended surgery to remove it, because he thought it would prevent his permanent teeth from coming in.  We decided fake teeth would be better than the risks of surgery (sure, surgery for an appendix, but for a tooth??).  Anyway, his baby teeth came out just fine.  His permanent teeth grew in just fine.  No surgery needed.
Nice work on a well written and factual article.  And yes, in a situation like this patience is a virtue.  

In the mean time, something you might consider asking yourself is "Do I want my child to end up with the same phobia that I have?"  
 From his point of view he won't be going to a "miserable operation" unless someone TELLs him it is going to be miserable.  There has been a lot of progress both in Pediatric Dentistry and Oral-Maxillofacial Surgery since your bad experience.  There are a lot of places you could go lose the fear.
Are you kidding me?  What a bunch of drama for nothing.  

"Jayan would face a miserable operation of oral maxillofacial surgery to remove the extra teeth."  Having had this operation myself to remove an extra set of my two front teeth, I was amazed so many syllables are assigned to such a simple procedure.  Pull the baby teeth, let the new ones come in or surgically remove the extras.  I had the extras removed, then after one tooth descended and the other didn't, a creative arrangement of braces involving hooks, pulleys and other such contraptions to bring the other one down.  Surgery was no biggie (except that I'm allergic to the gas) and I wore the contraption for about 2 weeks.  

Another parent eager to gain attention from the HORRIBLE condition her child has to SUFFER THROUGH.  For pete's sake, your kid has extra teeth.  As you so eloquently reported, so do a large number of his fellow humans.  Hard to believe this story made the front page of a news organizations website.
I had several extra teeth, multiple surgeries as a child and wore braces for six years. Then they  learned the roots of my extra teeth were wrapped around my facial bones. The pain was terrible for many years before they found this. They did not find one and when I was in my 30s, it had grown into a tumor, surrounded by scar tissue. Almost broke my jaw bone. Cut off blood supply to two teeth they worked so hard to save and killed them. Now I have to have most of these teeth pulled. I hate dentists.
This is so interesting and makes total sense!  As I remember a young man in my junior high school class who had several rows of teeth in the roof of his mouth.  We used to wonder why he talked so funny.  His speech was muffled like he had paper or something in his mouth or cheeks.  One day we were all talking about braces and such.  He mentioned to us that the reason his speech was muffled was because he had extra teeth in his mounth.  We all looked at each other and sort of said "no way."  He volunteered to show us by opening his mouth and allowing us to see the extra rows of teeth in the roof of his mouth.  As I remember, he had at least two extra rows up there.  I do remember that he talked about all the dental appointments he had had over the years with more to come.  For many years I kept wondering if it was just a dream or something I had made up in my youth.  But now reading your story - I realize it was true.  We never teased him (you just didn't do that sort of thing when I was in school).  As far as I know only a few of us knew about his extra teeth.  He was a good student and after we graduated I never saw him again.  But I just remember him opening his mouth and seeing those extra rows of teeth in the roof of his mouth and being astounded.
I had two extra sets of front teeth. When my baby teeth hadn't fallen out by the age of 9, I had oral surgery. The surgeon removed one pair of adult front teeth that were too large to come in, which was causing the problem. After the surgery the second set of adult teeth came down and are perfectly normal. I have had a total of 7 teeth removed since I was a kid. Yet every time I go to the dentist I fall asleep while they are working on me...hee hee!
Can you all please save your pulled teeth so I can make a tooth necklace?
I agree that it must be genetic. I have two extra teeth, my son has one extra, and rumor has it my grandmother had extra. Mine are fully formed and were never pulled because they fell right in line with all the rest without braces. I have to point them out for people to even notice.
I had two full sets of baby teeth also - don't really remember it but my mother told me i was spitting teeth out for a while like chicklets - only problem in my case was the adult teeth came out very soft
I think that's cool! And wow, $10 from the tooth fairy, lucky kid. When my baby teeth came out, I got nothing. My sister gave me a nickel once. (I'm a product of the 80's so it wasn't like a nickel was a lot of money). Earlier this year when I had my wisdom teeth pulled, I didn't get anything except a dry socket...!
My daughter has the opposite problem. She is MISSING 12 from birth. Her Dad is missing 11. She has braces and will have to have 4+ implants when she's about 18.
My sister, cousin and I all have an "extra" tooth in the roof of our mouths. My cousin and sister ahd theirs removed, but since mine hasn't grown through yet, it's still there. I also didn't have a permanent tooth to replace one of my front teeth, so I have a baby tooth still...at 29 years old! Good luck and hugs to your brave boy!
Both my boys have had baby teeth pulled to make room for their permanent teeth, and neither of them has been traumatized.  Even when our then 6 yo had 12 teeth missing (6 on top, 6 bottom) b/c we were living overseas and had to have all dental work done the 4 weeks were in the US over the summer, it was not traumatic at all.  He was too thrilled to get $30 in tooth fairy money to worry about not being able to eat corn on the cob for a while.

He will have to have permanent teeth removed, too, as he has a very small mouth.  I had that done as a kid, and it didn't bother me at all.  It won't bother him either.

Your son is lucky to have parents that care enough to have him see a dentist.  In the state where we live now, very few kids ever see a dentist and they end up with painful absesses.  So much better to see a dentist and have it done right.
My sister had four extra teeth in the roof of her mouth that had to be removed. I remember her recovery was awful to watch. Cutting the roof of your mouth is the most painful thing in the world. She had stitches in her mouth and she bled every time she tried to eat. I wouldn't wish it on anyone.
I had the same thing.  Extra teeth all over the place when I was young.  I went for two christmases "wanting my two front teeth".  The story nevers ends though, I had 6 wisdom teeth pulled when I was 22, now at 32 I have two more coming in.  My dentist says it likely will never end...
Dont worry i had 22 baby teeth and 4 permanent teeth pulled, N now i hate dentists(who dont give you pain meds)
My husband's two front teeth aren't flat in the back side. They look like they have tiny feet, sort of like molars. It's weird.
He can better chew his food so what leave him alone.
I do have an extra set of canine teeth in my upper gums that were discovered over twenty years ago.  I'm now in my forties.  The dentists I've had through out the years have decided to leave them alone until they star acting out.  So far they've remained in the same spot they've always been.
When my son was 16 and had his wisdom teeth surgically removed, one of them was about the size of three wisdom teeth combined.  It ended up being several teeth that grew together (perhaps a tooth bud that split).  
Fascinatingly, an elderly relative of mine grew a whole new set of teeth at age 96, long after she lost her adult teeth!

I'm not sure if that really counts as supernumerary teeth, but it sure seems along the same line!

:-)
While I don't have supernumerary teeth, mine are deficient in numbers.  I was told around the age of 20 that I either never got my 12-yr molars or never got my wisdom teeth.  They both look the same and the number of teeth didn't add up.  So, I'm 48 yrs old now and periodically get an aching in my right jaw and can feel a tooth coming down.  Don't know if it's a molar or a wisdom tooth.  Old wives tale: Your life is half over when you get your wisdom teeth in.  Since I haven't gotten them in yet, I guess I'll live forever, huh????


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Msnbc.com writers and editors will muse upon the wonderfully weird human body and the medical curiosities that make you go huh, ewww or ouch! Looking for informed, unhinged meditations on everything from dubious diseases to recipes for ersatz mucous? Well, this is the place.

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