Posts Tagged ‘cavity’

What can happen as a result of avoiding dental care?

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

Question: What can happen as a result of avoiding Dental care?

Answer: What starts as a small cavity can become very serious if left untreated. Some people wait until the pain they have is enough to exceed their avoidance tendency. This fear of pain is one of the major reasons why patients fail to seek help from a dentist until their emergency becomes to severe. At that point, what should have been a simple cavity now becomes a more involved root canal or extraction. Additionally, a patient who avoids routine dental cleanings and gum maintenance can wind up with severe gum disease ( Periodontal Disease), which causes gum recession, bone loss, tooth mobility and the eventual loss of teeth. Swellings and infections may result from neglecting these cavities and gum tissues, and what would have been unnecessary costs and procedures will now be necessary to restore the mouth back to a better state of health and function.

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What causes a toothache?

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

Question: What causes a toothache?

Answer: A toothache occurs when the nerve within the tooth gets damaged or inflamed. This is usually caused by bacteria from the tooth decay communicating with the nerve of the tooth. These cavities are usually brought about by a combination of poor oral hygiene coupled with eating a lot of sticky, sugary and starchy foods. This bacteria feeds on the sugars and starch left over from poor brushing and flossing. As a result acids are produced that will slowly eat away at the good tooth structure until the nerve becomes damaged, causing the toothache. Another way the nerve can get damage is from dental trauma (i.e. sports injury, rough play or fights, severe teeth grinding, or extensive dental work on hypersensitive teeth).

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Home Care Tips for the New Year

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

Happy New Year! Start this year off on the right foot with some helpful tips on keeping your teeth their best.

Proper Home Care involves the combination of having an adequate diet, exercising proper brushing and flossing techniques, and utilizing additional adjuncts such as tongue scraping and rinses. A summary of these various facets of home care is summarized below:

Diet

Any food or snack that can become trapped within pits and groves of your teeth or between your teeth can become harmful if not cleaned properly. Chewy candy (i.e. Taffies, caramels, jellybeans, and licorice) are among the biggest cavity culprits. However, you may be surprised to know that nuts, raisins and dried fruits can also cause a lot of damage, since they too get readily stuck in and around the teeth.

The complex carbohydrates such as pretzels and potato chips get broken down into the same sugars that are found in cakes and cookies. Any food debris left on the tooth creates an acid attack in the mouth to break it down. The less likely the food is to dissolve or rinse away, the longer the acid attacks will be. Chocolate, which is full of sugar, is actually not as bad for your teeth as dried fruit and nuts, because chocolate dissolves quickly. However, you can prolong any acid attack by eating or drinking things slowly over a longer period of time.

Additionally, if you can’t get to a brush right away, you should rinse well with water, and can chew sugar-free gum for 5 minutes to help neutralize the acids in your mouth and lift out the debris from within the grooves of your teeth. This is especially important in those individuals with a dry mouth.

Brushing

It is recommended that everyone brush at least twice each day with a soft-bristled brush or electric brush. The first time should be in the morning, after breakfast, so your child’s teeth are clean before leaving for school. It defeats the purpose of brushing if you give your child their sugary vitamin after they brush, or give them their breakfast to nibble on the bus, because these substances will stay lodged in the top grooves of their molars and in between their teeth for hours to come, contributing to the formation of cavities.

The most important time to brush is right before you go to sleep at night so that nothing is left on or in between your teeth when you are sleeping. The reason is that when you are awake, your saliva helps to bathe and rinse your teeth, but while asleep, you do not salivate that much, and your teeth are more susceptible to developing cavities from the debris left on them.

Additionally, if you have the chance to brush after other meals or snacks, it would be advisable. And don’t forget to brush their teeth after they are given medicine, as the acids contained in medicines may break down the tooth enamel.

An electric brush has a few advantages over a manual brush. First it generates more brush strokes per second; making it more effective for the amount of time it is being used. Keep in mind that while it is recommended to brush for 2 minutes, the average person only brushes for 30 seconds. With an electric brush it is easier to clean behind the back teeth. Many of these electric brushes have certain extra bells and whistles such as a digital timer so you know when 2 minutes is up, and an indicator light to show if you are pressing too hard. There is usually less trauma to the gums and teeth when brushing with an electric brush since many over-zealous manual toothbrush users bang into their gums with the wrong technique, or scrub too hard.

A manual toothbrush can be very effective with the right technique, and conversely, an electric toothbrush can be virtually useless with the wrong technique. If using a manual brush, use small, vibratory strokes on a 45 degree angle so that the bristles get in the pockets between the teeth and gums. Avoid the up and down or circular motion, as that can just traumatize the gums. If you are using an electric brush, try to spend at least 2 full seconds on each tooth surface (inside, outside and top), making sure to angle the brush between the teeth and having the bristles go between the tooth and the gums. Spin brushes are just a watered down version of an electric brush the may attract the attention of your child with its various themed versions.

Whether you use a manual brush or an electric, make sure you always change your brush or brush head every three months, or sooner if you just had a cold so you don’t reinfect yourself.

Flossing

It is very important to floss your teeth at least once per day (preferably before you go to sleep) to remove food debris and plaque from in between your teeth where your toothbrush couldn’t reach. Plaque causes tooth decay and can lead to gum disease. Another great reason to floss is that recent studies have shown that flossing helps to prevent a heart attack or stroke.

When flossing, be sure to take out a piece about 18 inches long, and gently wrap it around your middle fingers so that you have full control and dexterity holding the floss between your thumb and index finger. Then, starting at the base of the gums, work the floss in a circular motion scrapping the plaque away from the gums. Don’t forget to wrap the floss around the corner line angles of the tooth where plaque builds up.

Toothpastes

Toothpastes coupled with the proper brushing action is an effective way to remove plaque, a sticky, harmful film of bacteria that grows on your teeth that causes cavities, gum disease, and eventual tooth loss if not controlled. Tooth pastes also contain fluoride, which makes the entire tooth structure more resistant to tooth decay. Toothpastes also help to remove superficial stains and help to leave your mouth with a clean, fresh feeling. It doesn’t matter what kind of toothpaste you use, as long as it contains fluoride.

Other Dental Aids

Other dental aids that work very well are pre-brushing rinses, such as Plax, and post brushing antiseptic mouthwashes designed to help kill germs between your teeth. Water Jet Irrigators, such as Waterpiks, are effective for cleaning in between teeth, especially when one does not have the dexterity for flossing properly. Proxybrushes (brushes designed to remove plaque and debris in open areas between the teeth) and Stimudents (very thin wooden toothpick made of orange-wood) are also great adjuncts to removing debris that gets trapped between the teeth.

Tongue scraping

Your tongue is the most retentive surface in your mouth, and is quite adept at harboring bacteria within its Velcro-like surface. It is the anaerobic bacteria and volatile sulfur compounds trapped in these surfaces that give off the oral malodor.

Tooth brushing alone does not clean our mouths, and mouth rinses only mask the bad breath for a short period of time. It has been found that 90% of halitosis (bad breath) originates from the mouth, with 80% coming from the posterior third of the tongue. Brushing the posterior of the tongue will stimulate a gag reflex. The only definite way to remove those volatile sulfur compounds is to scrape the tongue with a tongue scraper designed to reach that area.

Advantages to Tooth-colored Fillings

Friday, August 13th, 2010

The composite resin (tooth-colored) fillings have come a long way in recent years. Their strength and longevity are now comparable to that of the silver fillings, but with much-enhanced esthetics. The dentist has the capability to match the filling exactly to the shade and color of your tooth such that no one else will ever know you had a cavity. Another advantage of these tooth-colored restorations is that the preparation is relatively conservative. Only decay is removed, and the filling is then bonded to the area that has been prepared.

Silver fillings do not have the same bonding capacity, and therefore rely on mechanical retention to hold the filling in place. As a result, good tooth structure is taken away to create the ideal depth and undercuts required to achieve adequate retention. Another advantage of composite restorations is that they are typically less sensitive to hot or cold, as metal tends to conduct temperature more readily. Since 1990, when “60 Minutes” ran a story on the alleged risks of dental amalgam (Silver-Mercury fillings), there has been a tremendous amount of media coverage.

Reports were made claiming that there have been miraculous “cures” for a variety of medical conditions after these types of restorations are removed, and that dental amalgam is a potential source of mercury toxicity. Mercury constitutes approximately 50% of dental amalgams, and trace amounts of mercury vapor escape in the process of chewing.

However, research conducted by the ADA (American Dental Association) and the scientific community has concluded that there are no serious health risks associated with Silver fillings, and that its removal has not been shown to have any beneficial effects for a patient’s specific medical condition. In my practice I utilize mostly the composite resin fillings, not because of health concerns with Amalgam, but rather because they are more conservative in terms of reducing tooth structure and because they are much more esthetically pleasing.