Well there are a few things, if you are between the ages of 2-6, you put your lost tooth under your pillow in hopes that the Tooth Fairy will come. If you are an adult and you lost an adult tooth, you may get a cap. If you're tooth is chipped, you go to a dentist office and get a filling. Also if you have the chip and it is sizable, you should put it in a baggie of milk and your dentist may be able to reattch it. (I chipped my front two teeth and they just cemented the chips back on to make them look realistic.)
Not given to babies. ANOTHER ANSWER: Sometimes a procedure called a 'pulpotomy' is performed on baby teeth. It is essentially the same as a root canal procedure on an adult tooth. The tooth is numbed with local anesthetic, the tooth is opened with a dental drill, the nerve and the infection is removed, and filling material is used to restore the tooth. It will typically preserve the baby tooth until the tooth is lost in the normal process of growth or 'exfoliation' where baby teeth are lost to make room for the permanent teeth.
The tooth fairy is your parents
Depending on why you lost your tooth, if you never lost all of your baby teeth (just because you have teeth under your baby onesdoesn't mean your going to lose them (two of my teeth were growing in a way they wouldn't push my baby teeth out and at 17 I got them pulled and within a month they were fully grown in)) and your tooth eventually falls out because of the pressure from the tooth growing under it, or if by chance the tooth that you "accidentally lost" is a baby tooth, AND there is a tooth under it then yes. Other wise no. Go to a dentist. You actually born with tooth buds inside your gums, your milk tooth buds are almost completed forming but the adult teeth have only started. The reason your milk teeth fall out is because the adult tooth bud has finished growing and crushes the root of the milk tooth. Some people are born without adult tooth buds. Count yourself lucky :/
Ha, when I read this I felt so many flashbacks. I remember one of my letters to her was something like this. Dear Tooth Fairy, I lost a tooth again! This is my (number) tooth that I lost already. Thank you for coming, it gives me a lot of support. Thank you for the money, too. I can't believe I lost a tooth again!
The tooth fairy doesn't even exist.
I believe you meant to ask if it is possible to save such a tooth. Well it all depends on the present condition of such a tooth. It is technically possible to remove the crown, then remove the root canal filling and redo the whole thing. But wheteher it is worth the time effort and money would have to be evaluated on a case by case basis.
If it was an adult tooth you lost, you won't be getting any replacement. If it was a milk tooth, well there's nothing you can do to hurry the replacement anyhow.
A baby tooth is a tooth which will be replaced when it has been lost by the child to whom it belongs, and replaced with a permanent, adult tooth.
tell them that the tooth fairy already took it
One Wikianswerers guess: - Probably, since she is 7, and I lost my first tooth when I was 4.
When he was on Stage a kid named Clint piled up and hit his face. But the Tooth he lost on Stage was a Fake. He Originally lost his tooth in a bike accident when he was younger.