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We observed that the patient did not use food supplements, pacifiers, and/or finger sucking, but was exclusively breast-fed and had a satisfactory weight gain for her age.
Finger sucking strength of the baby gradually increased compared to the beginning, as the intervention frequency increased.
At post-test, all EG infants used the provided soft taglet (comforting blanket) with positive feedback from parents, and had a wider variety of appropriate self-soothing methods than the infants in the CG (Fisher's exact test p=0.09): both finger and dummy (pacifier) sucking (EG 41.7%, CG 0); only dummy sucking (EG 25.0%, CG 41.7%); only finger sucking (EG 16.7%, CG 25.0%); no finger or dummy sucking (EG 16.7%, CG 33.3%).
In an Indian study done in Mysore1, 65.4% mothers reported that diarrhea is associated with teething, 34.1% thought that fever, 18.5% irritability, 37.6% drooling of saliva, 68.3% finger sucking and 62.4% attributed gum biting to teething process.
The same researchers indicated that the major reasons for advising for pacifier use included calming the infant (78.3%), helping the infant fall asleep (57.4%), keeping them comfortable and quiet (40.4%), preventing finger sucking (20.9%), regulating the time between feedings (12.6%), helping the infant during tooth eruption (9.4%), and facilitating removing the infant from the breast after feeding (6.8%).
According to the American Association of Orthodontists, you should schedule an appointment with an orthodontist if you see the following: Difficulty chewing or biting, mouth breathing, thumb or finger sucking, nail/lip biting or other oral habits, crowded, misplaced or blocked out teeth, missing teeth, jaws that shift, make sounds, protrude or are recessed, biting the cheek or biting into the roof of the mouth, protruding teeth, teeth that meet in an abnormal way or don't meet at all, facial imbalance or asymmetry, grinding or clenching of teeth, inability to comfortably close lips, impacted teeth.
There was no significant association (P > 0.05) with thumb and finger sucking.
Sucking on a pacifier and finger sucking are common methods of nonnutritive sucking (NNS).