Evodent Pediatric Dental Patient Education Model for 9 Year Child – Mixed Dentition – Advanced Eruption Stage Dental Model
Original price was: ₹5,000.00.₹1,995.00Current price is: ₹1,995.00.
Pediatric dental patient education model for 9 year old children showing advanced mixed dentition with erupting permanent teeth.
Shipping & Benefits
- Ships in 24 hours
- Damage-proof packaging
- GST invoice provided

Description
The Evodent Pediatric Dental Patient Education Model for 9 Year Child accurately represents a child in the advanced mixed dentition stage, where multiple permanent teeth have erupted while some primary teeth are still present. This is the age when parents begin to notice alignment issues, spacing changes and eruption asymmetry and start asking serious questions. By the age of 9, dental development enters a critical phase.
This model is designed to help dentists visually explain what is normal, what needs monitoring, and what may require early intervention.
What This 9-Year Pediatric Dental Model Shows
At around 9 years of age, a child’s mouth typically includes:
- Erupting permanent incisors, canines and premolars
- Remaining primary molars
- Active changes in arch length and tooth position
- Early signs relevant to orthodontic assessment
The Evodent 9-Year Model clearly demonstrates this transition, making it ideal for patient education and clinical counselling.
Why This Model Is Important for Patient Education
This is the age where:
- Parents worry about crooked teeth
- Children compare their teeth with peers
- Orthodontic discussions often begin
Using this model, dentists can:
- Explain normal vs delayed eruption
- Show why some teeth look misaligned temporarily
- Discuss space management and interceptive orthodontics
- Improve parent understanding and treatment acceptance
Seeing the process removes confusion and anxiety.
Who Should Use This Model?
- Pediatric dentists – eruption monitoring and counselling
- Orthodontists – early assessment and parent education
- General dentists – explaining mixed dentition changes
- Dental colleges – pedodontics and growth & development teaching
- Patient education programs
If you explain dental development regularly, this model becomes indispensable.
Key Features
- Accurate 9 year mixed dentition anatomy
- Clearly visible erupting permanent teeth
- Realistic representation of transitional occlusion
- Transparent base for enhanced visualization
- Smooth articulation for easy demonstration
- Durable design for daily clinical and academic use
Built to explain, not just display.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q. What age does this pediatric dental model represent?
A. This model represents a 9-year-old child, showing an advanced mixed dentition stage.
Q. Does this model show erupting permanent teeth?
A. Yes. The model clearly shows erupting and erupted permanent teeth, along with remaining primary teeth.
Q. Is this model useful for orthodontic counselling?
A. Absolutely. It is ideal for explaining early orthodontic considerations, spacing issues, and eruption timing to parents.
Q. How is this different from the 7 Year Pediatric model?
A. The 7 year model shows early mixed dentition, while the 9-year model shows a more advanced stage with additional permanent teeth erupted.
Q. Can dental students use this model?
A. Yes. It is excellent for teaching growth & development, pedodontics, and mixed dentition analysis.
Why Evodent Pediatric Models Stand Out
Evodent focuses on age-specific dental development, not generic anatomy.
Each Evodent pedo model is:
- Clinically accurate
- Easy to explain to parents
- Useful across multiple dental specialties
- Designed for real-world patient communication
That’s why Evodent models are trusted for both education and counselling.
At 9 years, dental development looks confusing but it doesn’t have to be. The Evodent Pediatric Dental Patient Education Model for 9 Year Child – Mixed Dentition helps dentists turn complex changes into clear explanations, building confidence for parents and clarity for treatment decisions. This is where understanding meets prevention.























