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

I didn't actually have an "extra" tooth, but one of my adult's was actually found in the roof of my mouth toward the back.  I was already in braces when they found this tooth, so they cut the roof of my mouth open and attached a bracket to the tooth.  Over time of about 1 yr. the tooth had moved to the right position, but just inside the jawbone.  Over the course of the next few years the tooth never slid into place.  As it loosened, I would hit it with my lowers and it gave me excruciating pain.  Drunken one night in college, I just yanked that sob right outta there.  I have a bridge in now, but I was darn sure happy to get that out.  Nevertheless, my family wasted a lot of money trying to get that fixed.
My five your old is scheduled for surgery next month to remove his extra "shark" teeth. I initially freaked out, but now I feel a little better about it. When his baby teeth first began to come out, one came out a little twisted to the side. My pediatrician was adamant that my son had used a pacifier and that was why his tooth was crooked. My son never used a pacifier. Now the oral surgeon and pediatric dentist have both confirmed that his baby front tooth came out that way because of the supernumery teeth inside his palette.
Having too many teeth is better than having not enough, Im 26 yrs old and only have 19 teeth with bridges in my mouth, some of which are baby teeth.  I never got most of my adult teeth, and had to get a lot of baby teeth pulled, braces and now bridges.  Let me tell you all that work wasnt cheap, and my teeth still look bad.
I also had extra teeth, 3 full sets to be exact. My mother was very worried when I kept losing teeth but there was always another tooth underneath. The tooth fairy was very good to me.
I have worked in a dental office before and personally never saw anything like this. Although, the dentist I worked for said that he has heard of teeth growing back after being pulled. I was one that only had three wisdom teeth so did my mom (I was missing one of my top left so was she). After having them pulled years later I had some discomfort where my wisdom teeth had been pulled. The dr. was concerned that a tooth may have grown back there, but thankfully not. There are millions of people in this world there are bound to be all kinds of astonishing things in people.
My mom had supernumerary teeth. I think it's totally awesome! Why take 'em out?
I had supernumerary teeth - not a big deal.  They come in, then you pull them out.  Contrary to one bloggers advice to leave them alone - you can't they crowd out your "real" teeth and can be painful and increase the risk of cavities, etc. Plus, they are truly unattractive teeth.  They need to come out.  You did the right thing.
When I was 9 my dentist said my xrays showed an extra set of bicuspids, or eye teeth.  He pulled the permanent ones that had already come in and the 2 extras came down naturally.  I don't know if the first or second set were the supernumeraries.  My top teeth are now perfectly set.  I only wish the case had been the same with the bottom teeth!  Let your son enjoy his "specialness".  Until reading your article I had not ever know what my "extra" teeth were called.  Now at the age of 48, I can say I am proud to be special too!  Thanks for sharing his story!
my daughter lost both her front bottom teeth at age 5 and both her front bottom and another bottom one by age 6.  She turns 7 in Feb and I refer to her as my "toothless wonder".  A lot of the kids in her class have lost their teeth also, so I question your age range for losing teeth.
It has to be genetic!  In may family we have the problem of in vitro roaming supernumerary teeth buds.  My mom had a tooth come out of her foot when she was 16 and I am congenitally "missing" two eye teeth. Can't wait to see where those show up one day!
My father did not have an adult set of teeth.  At 64 years old he's a grown man with a mouth full of little baby teeth. He did lose one tooth last year while eating and we joked that at 63 years old he should be getting at least $100 from the tooth fairy!
I'm almost 41 and I have this. Yes, present tense- have. I have 4 teeth behind my top fron 4. They are each about 3/16" to 1/4" long. I never had dental care as a child. I go to the dentist every 6 months and he has never said anything about this. I thought it was just me. They don't bother me in the least. Odd.
I had two sets of baby teeth, and lost both sets naturally, my mom saved both sets, when she told my dentist, he didn't believe her til she produced all those teeth
My sister had a third set also. She is Native American, a group which is apparently more inclined to have the extra set.
I also had 3 sets of teeth- After my baby teeth, I had 2 sets of permanet teeth come in. They came down every which way, so a dentist put me to sleep and cut out 13 teeth.  Unfortunately, my teeth were of poor quality so I have grown up in a dentist chair and spent too much $$$$.  Best of Luck to your son and family,  Happy Thanksgiving!
At least he has 3 sets!  I only have one and needless to say, my "baby" teeth have not held up too well for my whole 24 years.  I have a terrible smile...it is really pretty devistating.  It's easier and more cost efficient to take out than to add teeth!

I had 4 teeth in one place, my right eye tooth. The third one appeared when I was 25 years old and the fourth when I was nearly 40 years old. Both times I had tremdous hormonal changes-when I was 25 I grew 3/4" and when I was 40 I went into premature menopause for the third time. The two extra teeth were exactly like shark teeth, flat and sharp with tiny little teeth. Both of them had to be surgically removed and both were growing backward. Neither dentist had really ever heard of this before but it was in the 70's and early 80's.
I, too had extra teeth-38 baby teeth pulled-my tooth fairy was good to me! I had a chest of all of them and no one ever wanted to believe me that so many were pulled.  Good luck!
I love reading these. I am actually on my 8th wisdom tooth soon to be pulled and I have one more coming in. Oh the joy.
I had some extra teeth in the front, they were removed because they prevented my permanent teeth from moving into position
That is weird...but somewhat common. I hope he doesn't grow up hating the dentist!!!
I never had the extra teeth, but when the adult teeth came in, they were smaller than most person's baby teeth.  eventually I had to have all of them pulled in a hospital.  My trouble now is getting dentists to make my dentures small enough because my mouth is small.  I can't wear adult dentures.
Maybe his jaw is too small
Sharon, good thought, though evolution isn't a reactive science.  I want to fly, but that doesn't mean I'll evolve wings by the time I'm 50.
do you have any pictures.My daughter has extra teeth like that.This way we could show her that other people have these extra chompers too.
WHen my son was 4 I noticed his gums above his front baby teeth were protruding out and immediately set an appt. up with his dentist. He had an extra set of front teeth. He did have the oral surgery and the front baby teeth and extra set were removed. He is now 17 with a beautiful set of chompers and has absolutely no recollection of the surgery. I think it was more painful on his father and I. We cried like babies during his surgery and worried about how it would affect him!
Gina, Vanc, WA
H. Hansin asked why the parents don't leave the kids' teeth alone and then mentions she had two sets in her mouth. Well, first of all it looks nasty when people allow their children to have two sets of teeth in their mouth. Also it causes crowding which results in teeth growing crooked and some of the teeth stay impacted in the gums which means more pain and invasive surgery versus pulling early and sometimes being able to avoid surgery. I would hope most parents would choose less pain in the present and pulling baby teeth early rather than wait and have a child go through more pain at a later date.
Wow, I thought I was the only one who had "shark teeth"  However I actually had both sets of teeth out at the same time.  My baby teeth in front and my permenent teeth grew in behind them and the dentist foud another set underneath.  They removed the baby teeth in front and sucked out the other set.  I had four holes in my gums for the longest time.
extra teeth run in my family too. but none have shown up in a long time.. so i hope my kiddos (2 and 4)are spared. but hey... way back when they really couldn't do much about it. so lets all be happy dentistry has advance so much from the 1940s, right?! :)
Be careful with pulling your childs teeth to early. I had a condition like this when younger (I was a sr in high school & still had baby teeth). When I had the teeth pulled, the oral surgeon hit a nerve and i have had a facial paralysis ever since! I have been told byu several dr's this is more common than people think and its dangerous to pull baby teeth.

My son is now experiencing same problem of to many teeth but he still has several baby teeth (he is 10) and every modern day dds said dont remove them until ALL of his baby teeth fall out - then if still a problem oral surgery might need to be done but there is NO REASON to ever have to pull a baby tooth. Oral surgeons are in business of pulling teeth. I recommend seeing a few dds first to get their opinion as they are in business of saving and not removing teeth.
To the person (Sharon Smith) who guessed it was a sign of living longer and attributed it to evolution.  Wrong.  It's fewer teeth not more!  Both my daughter and myself were born without wisdom teeth. Scientist have stated, that as we evolve, we need fewer teeth due to our diet, and less hair.  I have no wisdom teeth and not a whole lot of hair; as a result, the implication is that I am higher evolved the most.  :)
my mom had a couple molars grow in behind her front teeth when she was a kid.  she got them pulled but i never thought it was weird.  i didn't have any extra teeth (that i know of??  now i'm wondering!) but mine came in all funny...i had 4 of my bottom teeth pulled at once when i was about 12 and it didn't slow me down at all...they also said i was going to have to have oral surgery because two of my canines were pointing the wrong way and wouldn't grow in but apparently they flipped themselves around.  your kid will be fine.  just make sure he gets a milkshake or ice cream whenever he gets dental work done, that's what my mom always did, and none of us are scared of the dentist.  just one of those things you have to do.
My daughter had a molar that grew from the back of her mouth to the front and starting coming in on the roof of her mouth behind her front teeth.  She complained about a bump and when we took her in the dentist was started to see a molar with a 3" long root.

She had it surgically removed and has had no problems since.
I have 4 shark children.  We did NOTHING about them unless they were clearly problematic, the worst case of which was a supernumery that didn't want to leave even though the permanant one was pushing up under it.  None of my grand children has this though and there are 3 of them.
Very common situation and NOT a big deal!!!  I have worked in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery for fifteen years and we remove supernumerary (extra) teeth all the time.  I find it irresponsible of you to say your child could face a miserable operation of oral maxillofacial surgery to remove the extra teeth.  Most children are up and about the very same day, requiring nothing more than over the counter childrens Tylenol or Motrin.  Shame on you for creating fear in others just because you have issues with Dentistry.  I really hope your article doesn't scare anyone into not seeking treatment for thier children or themselves!!!  
Hey, as a positive your son won't be needing his two front teeth for Christmas!! I was one of those people with the opposite problem...Just think of the big man in the sky "averaging" things out amongst all of us. And keep good humor, I found out about my problem when I was third grade. There have been more then enough jokes about my teeth. But when I was in the retainer stage with fake teeth, I was the only one that could wiggle their teeth. Its better then wiggling ears!!!
My mom and I both have an extra set of wisdom teeth on the top.  I went to dental assisting school and it was a fun thing for all of the other students to look at.  I still have mine but my mom had hers pulled.  Mine are very small; kind of like mini molars
My mom and I both have an extra set of wisdom teeth on the top.  I went to dental assisting school and it was a fun thing for all of the other students to look at.  I still have mine but my mom had hers pulled.  Mine are very small; kind of like mini molars
The antichrist? Did someone really write that?  I bet comments like that sure make his parents feel better.
I am starting to wonder if I should worry. My 6 year old son. (Just turned six a month ago) has had to have 4 of his baby teeth extracted because 2 (what we assume to be permanent teeth) started to grow in behind his front bottom teeth. Now I am wondering if they really are permanents and not extra teeth. The baby teeth that they pulled weren't even loose yet. Any suggestions? Should I worry?
I had two rows of teeth on both my upper and lower jaws, except for my two front teeth. Had to have 21 teeth pulled on two different visits. Needed a lot of braces after tthat, but that kept me out of Viet Nam as they didn't want to draft me only to send me to the only place they had Army orthodontists-- Hawaii!!
I never had extra teeth but when I was little the formula my mom had to give me ate the enamel off my teeth. When I was 5 I had most of my baby teeth pulled using oral surgery. All I remember is the elevator ride in the hospital. I thought that was the coolest thing ever and my brother and sisters didn't get to come. The rest of my teeth has silver caps on them and I had metal spacers on my teeth to insure my adult teeth could grow in properly. I don't remember ever being in pain.
I had an extra set of permanent teeth come in after they removed the first set when I was 10 years old. It is hereditery in my family. Also, I did get the 4 wisdom teeth and use one as a part of my regular teeth instead of a molar. I went in every weekend to get 4 or 5 pulled with local numbing and two Anacin aspirin tablets. It wasn't too bad. That was 47 years ago and I survived.
I never realized that this was so common... I had lost all of my baby teeth before I was half way through 1st grade and in 4th grade I had extra teeth (the K-9's on top) and a couple of others that had to be pulled. They had grown in but above where teeth normally come in- so it looked like they were fangs coming out towards the top of my gums overlapping my other teeth. Kids used to tease saying I was a vampire or something. And then afterwards I wore braces until midway through highschool. Even now I still have a "bridge" or pernament retainer on the back of my bottom teeth to keep them straight since the over crowding was so bad, that if I would remove it, my teeth would go back to being crooked.
I too am an oddity, though I never knew they had a name for it!  I had an extra top set of front teeth (my parents each had one extra tooth so I got two!).  I had a total of 5 teeth surgically removed when I was in 2nd grade (three baby teeth and the two "spares".  No trama for me and it's a great "Name one unique thing about yourself..." icebreaker item.  One of my permanent front teeth came in at a 90 degree angle, but with a little orthodontics, it was straightened out.
Don't you think you are over-reacting just a bit? Phobia's and inferiority complexes are brought about when so called "common" people can't deal with one who stands out as different in some degree. I would think that YOU as a Mom, wouldn't expose her child to such things. Perhaps there are many more than you are aware of who are not in line so to speak as "Norm". Although your son's situation is quite different, once course of completion, it sounds as if no one would ever know unless you force him to FEEL different. Extra doesn't always resemble bad. It doesn't even always stand out as strange! I have five teeth in front on the bottom. baby teeth, and adult teeth later on. look perfectly normal in size and structure. (perfectly straight too). It's the dentist who acts as though this is freaky somehow. My grand-daughter was born with teeth. It really changed no more in her life than mine did in having five in front instead of ONLY the four most have. So unless ones makes the one different feel he's a freak because he's different...I suppose he may actually be normal, but uniquely different.
It is refreshing to not be so common...after all, it's what makes us...us.
I happened to lose a few of my teeth twice.  The first were my baby teeth, the second I thought were my adult teeth, but after a couple years they also fell out, and I grew new teeth.

Thank goodness I'm old enough to not have had my teeth "discovered" by an oral surgeon or dentist.  I was fortunate enough to have them grow in and lose them "normally" twice wihtout the need for painful expesive surgery.  Oh, and btw I have my wisdom teeth also, and have never regretted not getting them removed.
Wouldn't it be great if at 40 or 50, all your teeth fell out and a nice new set grew in.  ready for the next couple of decades of good eating.
I believe it is genetic, as my brother, first cousin, uncle, and myself all have had at least one "extra" tooth.
Hold tight you are doing your best and all will work it's self out.  My son was born with no enamel on his front teeth and his molar's didn't close right...youlive and learn.  Five years later my nephew was born with the same problem and because we were aware of what to look for we caought it early.  My son at age 3 wanted to be a Dentist...at age 16 is looking for a college that has a dental program and what thier requirments are.  Kids are only afraid of what we make them afraid of.


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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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