Remove this Banner Ad

AFL Player 30: Nate Caddy - Reports of groin tightness, restricted training loads for a few weeks - 20/11

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

Log in to remove this Banner Ad

What's this edge stuff I'm seeing relating to Essendon?
the cliff we always fall off has an edge
7RmQtE.gif
 
Weideman backed into him, they collided in midair and Caddy essentially took a bite out of Weid’s head.

It always surprises me at the amount of players that roll sans mouthguard
might make weids a better player
 

Log in to remove this Banner Ad

Hope they found it but looks like the gum is also a bit ****ed
They got it. Took it to the coffee van to get a cup of milk. Hope it was not soy milk.
 

Remove this Banner Ad

can you actually put teeth back in if they fall out??
Yeah. Milk helps preserve it a bit because calcium etc, and then they try to reattach it (kinda the same as reattaching a finger or anything else you might accidentally remove).

Being that it is also a living part of your body it can die if detached for too long though. Doesn’t mean you can’t shove it back in at that point, but it will go grey and not be as pretty as it could be.
 

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

Yeah. Milk helps preserve it a bit because calcium etc, and then they try to reattach it (kinda the same as reattaching a finger or anything else you might accidentally remove).

Being that it is also a living part of your body it can die if detached for too long though. Doesn’t mean you can’t shove it back in at that point, but it will go grey and not be as pretty as it could be.

Knocked-out adult teeth​

If an adult tooth is knocked out:
  • Handle the tooth by the crown (smooth white part), not the root (yellowish pointy part).
  • If the tooth is dirty, gently rinse it in milk or saline for a few seconds. Do not rinse the tooth with water.
  • Holding the clean tooth by the crown, gently put it back into the hole in the gum (socket). Make sure the pointy yellowish root(s) is the part that goes into the socket.
  • Hold the tooth in place by gently biting on something soft, like a handkerchief.
  • See an oral health professional immediately.
If you can’t replace the tooth yourself:
  • Try not to let the tooth dry out - place it in milk or spit into a clean container and place the tooth in saliva.
  • Seek immediate advice from an oral health professional.
 
Last edited:

Knocked-out adult teeth​

If an adult tooth is knocked out:
  • Handle the tooth by the crown (smooth white part), not the root (yellowish pointy part).
  • If the tooth is dirty, gently rinse it in milk or saline for a few seconds. Do not rinse the tooth with water.
  • Holding the clean tooth by the crown, gently put it back into the hole in the gum (socket). Make sure the pointy yellowish root(s) is the part that goes into the socket.
  • Hold the tooth in place by gently biting on something soft, like a handkerchief.
  • See an oral health professional immediately.
If you can’t replace the tooth yourself:
  • Try not to let the tooth dry out - place it in milk or spit into a clean container and place the tooth in saliva.
  • Seek immediate advice from an oral health professional.
Hey saliva works too, cool.

Same also if you break a tooth, they can glue it back together if you have the piece (keep it in milk until it can be put back together). The fix doesn’t seem to last forever though. Idk if the tech has improved but my brother ended up with a cap and then eventually a crown.
 

Remove this Banner Ad

AFL Player 30: Nate Caddy - Reports of groin tightness, restricted training loads for a few weeks - 20/11

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

Back
Top