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The Dangers of Soda

The Sugar and The Acid In Soft Drinks

Love Coke or Diet Coke? Did you know that Coke contains 9 teaspoons of sugar? With this amount of energy from a can or bottle of this famous soft drink, no wonder it’s addictive. Indulging in high-sugar soft drinks is mostly associated with obesity and type 2 diabetes. But it’s not only that. Sodas can also have negative effects on your teeth, potentially leading to cavities and tooth decay.

Soda’s high sugar content get into nooks and tight spaces in the grooves, sides and hard to brush areas of teeth, including under the gums. In a matter of hours, bacterial colonization turn them into plaque. Decay can set in and cavities formed. Dental erosion is another type of decay that results from acidic liquids contacting your teeth. Sodas, like Coke and Diet Coke, have levels of phosphoric acid that can bathe the entire tooth structure and erode or thin away enamel. This can lead to sensitivity, pain, or cracking of the enamel. Did you know that this is the same phosphoric acid used in industrial cleaners?

Did you know also that Coca Cola’s deep brown color is actually a dye? It’s caramel dye that actually does not add any flavor to the soda but can contribute to staining of the teeth. The teeth becomes yellow, and the more yellow it becomes, the weaker is the enamel. Your teeth looks unhealthy, and that can affect your smile and your confidence.

The best way to keep from damaging your teeth is to do away with soft drinks or soda completely, or reduce your intake. If you must, choose the ones that are less acidic, like Sprite or Diet Coke. Or else, use a straw that limits the contact of the drink with your teeth. Take water after you’ve had soft drinks.

Avoid drinking soft drinks before going to bed for you are letting sugar and acid stay in contact with your teeth overnight. Remember, after taking soda, don’t brush your teeth immediately. Your enamel has just been exposed to cola’s acidic content and brushing right away will only erode your teeth much quicker. Gargle with water first, rinsing off any remaining sugar and acid clinging to tooth surfaces, your tongue, gums and other structures. After a while, you can brush.

Know What’s Good and Bad for Teeth

The next time you reach out for a can of soda, think again. Your Bellingham dentist recommends wise choices for food and drinks to keep your dentition in better condition much longer.

Is Oil Pulling Good For Teeth?

You must have heard about oil pulling – that’s swishing oil around the mouth, like it were mouthwash. This 15 to 20-minute remedy is said to be an Ayurveda practice in India some 3000 years ago, aimed at keeping breath fresh and clean, eliminating bacteria and whitening teeth. Ayurveda texts claimed that oil pulling is not just for dental issues, but can cure over 30 systemic diseases as well.

Washing with a tablespoon of oil in the mouth might be uncomfortable for most people for the taste and texture of oil is novel. It can take some getting used to, keeping in mind that the benefits outweigh the negatives. Some people like sesame oil, others find coconut oil more pleasant. Done first thing in the morning, oil is swished around the mouth, the jaws moving up and down as though chewing, but what’s important is the oil be kept moving around. It collects bacteria this way, so you don’t swallow the oil. Spit it out, rinse with water, and proceed to brushing and flossing.

Oil pulling is a natural cleansing process. Oil is capable of cutting through plaque and removing toxins. Plaque is said to be fat-soluble. Lipids in the oils pull out or absorbs toxins from the saliva. The mix usually ends up turning thick, viscous and white. Once it reaches this consistency, it is spit out before the toxins are reabsorbed. Some studies have shown that teeth, gums and jaws are strengthened; the process also prevents bad breath, cavities, gingivitis, bleeding gums, and dryness of the mouth.

People who have tried it say it is an oral health treatment, but when practiced regularly, the process benefits the rest of the body as well. They say oil pulling can relieve migraines, correct hormone imbalance, reduce inflammation, allergies, eczemas, and improve vision. It can also treat digestive issues, support normal kidney function, and detoxify the body of heavy metals.

While oil pulling benefits are proved by testimonials and some studies, there are quarters who say that the remedy may be beneficial to oral health, but further research may be needed to make claims that it can also treat medical conditions.

Fact From Fiction In Bellingham

Why don’t you ask us, your Bellingham professionals, about oil pulling? Know more about it and separate what’s true and what’s not. We all work for everyone’s oral health here at Tetrick Family Dentistry in Bellingham.

Is Your Mouthwash Losing its Effect?

Effect of Mouthwash

Regularly rinsing with a mouthwash is a strong choice for your daily oral hygiene routine. A good, antibacterial wash is able to get into even the hardest-to-reach places in your mouth and kill off much of the bacteria that causes tooth decay and gum disease throughout the day. Unfortunately, bacteria are resilient organisms; they are constantly adapting, and every generation that is subjected to your mouthwash makes the cultures in your mouth slightly more likely to survive next time.

According to a study conducted by Clinical Research Associates, the harmful bacteria in your mouth will gradually build up a resistance to the active ingredients in your mouthwash. Using the same product for an extended period of time means that you will be getting a lesser effect later on.

In order to avoid this, try rotating your mouthwash products; if you just finished a bottle of mouthwash that uses alcohol as its active ingredient, look for a different product that uses a non-alcoholic antibacterial agent. By the time you are finished with this second product, your oral bacteria should be more vulnerable to the first again.

Proper Dental Care by our Bellingham Dentist

For more tips on proper dental care, talk to our Bellingham dentist. If you would like to set up an appointment, please contact our office directly during our office hours.

The Effects of Stress On Your Oral Health

Stress and Oral Health

Stress has a lot of negative effects on a person’s health. It can raise your blood pressure, cause your skin to break out, and even take its toll on your oral health. There are many ways that this can happen, including the following:

  • Many cases of bruxism can be linked to, or at least aggravated by stress. This condition breaks down your tooth structure and leaves you vulnerable to serious decay.
  • Gum disease can be aggravated by stress.
  • Canker sores, cold sores, and similar afflictions may sometimes be caused by stress.
  • People often manage stress by overeating, or indulging in sugary comfort foods. This encourages tooth decay and gum disease.
  • Other people resort to nervous habits when they are experiencing stress. If these habits include chewing your nails, chewing ice, or chewing anything else that isn’t food, you are putting your teeth at unnecessary risk.
  • Serious stress can lead to depression. When you are depressed, regular routines like brushing and flossing often suffer.

Contact our Bellingham Dentist

If you are plagued with stress, seek out ways to manage the stressors in your life. Meanwhile, keep your regular appointments with our Bellingham dentist, and you should be fine.

Periodontal Disease and Health of the Heart

Causing the Link: Inflammation and Bacteria

Research has revealed that if you have periodontal disease, you are almost twice as likely to have heart disease, and more so if you have high cholesterol. The same research also point out that more than 85 million Americans have some form of cardiovascular disease, while more than 200 million American adults have some form of periodontal condition. The relationship between these two systemic diseases can be attributed to the suspected role of bacteria and inflammation.

Consider this scenario. In the human body, there are always barriers between different tissues. The gums surrounding your teeth are effectively separated from other tissues such as muscles and bone. However, nerves and blood supply are continuously providing stimuli and vital nutrients to all tissues and organs of the body. In cases of gum infection, like periodontal disease, its bacteria can break down the barrier between the gums and underlying connective tissues causing swelling and inflammation.

Normal activities like chewing and brushing can cause bacteria to travel the bloodstream and invade other organs, such as the cardiovascular system.

There is a high possibility that oral bacteria can trigger a similar response that can lead to the formation of plaques in arterial walls of the cardiovascular system. In fact, the same oral bacteria have been found in the fatty deposits of people with atherosclerosis. The fatty deposits, made out of cholesterol, can break loose and clog arteries that may lead to a heart attack or a stroke. Usually, hypertensive people also suffer from high cholesterol levels that contribute to the narrowing of arteries. While scientists are still researching whether inflammation is at the root of the problem, they say it is firmly established that a link exists between periodontal disease and heart disease.

Avoid a Heart Attack: Treat Periodontal Disease in Bellingham

If you wish to know more about this link, visit your Bellingham dentist. Don’t let yourself be a statistic in the growing number of adult Americans with periodontal disease, who might also just have a heart condition.

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Oral Health and Kidney Disease: What You Should Know

Linking The Mouth and the Kidneys

Growing in prevalence and associated with severe life-threatening complications, chronic kidney disease (CKD) is becoming a worldwide public health problem. In the US alone, 11.6% of adult Americans have chronic kidney disease. This gradual loss of kidney function, mainly caused by diabetes and uncontrolled high blood pressure, can lead to waste buildup in the body leading to kidney failure. This state of failure requires dialysis or a kidney transplant to maintain life.

Sufferers living with CKD encounter many health issues impacting quality of life. One of this is dental in nature. Did you know that during disease progression, a majority of CKD patients suffer oral complications, foremost is periodontal disease. Because those with kidney disease have weakened immune systems, they are more susceptible to infections. A study in the Journal of Clinical Periodontology reported that people with kidney disease and those on dialysis are more likely to have periodontal disease and other oral health problems than the general population. Some studies even said that it’s 90% of patients.

Patients undergoing dialysis manifest a variety of oral disorders. The teeth, oral mucosa, salivary glands, periodontium, and alveolar bone can all be affected, leading to manifestations like gingival bleeding, early tooth loss, periodontitis, and dry mouth, etc. Because of calcium imbalance or calcium loss the jaw bone can weaken and lead to loss of the teeth.

If a CKD patient requires a dental procedure, he must advise his doctor who will prescribe antibiotic cover to guard against infection. If the patient is on dialysis, dental procedures, even as simple as a tooth extraction, should be scheduled on a non-dialysis day. Heparin, a drug that inhibits blood coagulation, administered during dialysis, may cause some patients to have extra bleeding.

In the same vein, when a patient is scheduled for a kidney transplant, part of the workup is a thorough oral examination. Existing infections from gum disease or advanced tooth decay can defer a transplant procedure or prevent the patient from being eligible for the transplant until dental work is done. Caution is exercised in these situations because any oral infection can compromise these treatments for CKD.

Chronic Kidney Disease Patient in Bellingham

If you have a CKD patient who require expert oral care, see us in Bellingham. We at Dr. Tetrick’s know the special considerations for those with kidney disease.

The Dental Patient with Parkinson’s Disease

Chewing and Swallowing with Parkinson’s Disease

About 1 million Americans are living with Parkinson’s disease or PD, that we know as a neurodegenerative disorder wherein brain cells progressively die. Parts of the brain affected will manifest in motor and nonmotor symptoms. Hence, there’ll be tremors, rigidity, extreme slowness of movement, and impaired balance. Swallowing and speaking difficulties are also common, all seriously affecting quality of life.

Persons with Parkinson’s also have oral health issues just like anyone else. However, they face more challenging scenarios that impede or at least make difficult dental problems that are otherwise simple for healthier individuals.

If facial muscles are affected, it can change the way they speak or chew food, more so if they have a toothache or are missing some teeth. Unable to chew, Parkinson’s sufferers are unable to swallow more than bite-sized food and can run the risk of choking. They can also accidentally aspirate or inhale food or drink particles that can lead to lung infections, like pneumonia. If they have rheumatoid arthritis and are taking medications for that, the drugs can depressed their immune system and leave them open to a higher risk of infections that their oral cavity and structures may not be able to handle.

It may seem that little may have changed with regards to the dental challenges faced by persons with PD. Many years ago, a study in Hokkaido, Japan tested a group of patients with the condition as against a control group. It concluded that PD patients had more complaints about their oral health and more problems in oral health behavior than the general population.

It reported also that PD patients had more complaints of chewing difficulties and denture discomfort than controls. Fewer PD patients had their own teeth. Likewise, it also said that few PD patients cleaned their dentures every day and more than half of them had problems with swallowing.

Be that as it may, regular visits to the dentist, as well as twice daily brushing and flossing, and proper cleaning of dentures, will help to eliminate most dental issues with persons suffering from Parkinson’s.

Caring for the Parkinson’s Patient in Bellingham

Bellingham dentistry recognizes the special needs of persons with PD, the condition making proper oral hygiene and oral health behavior full of challenges. We are more than capable to meet those. Come visit us for an appointment.

Dental Concerns of the Diabetic Patient

Diabetics and The Dental Risks They Face

Time and again, dental practitioners see diabetics coming in for consultation and treatment for any of the various issues that concern ordinary, non-diabetic persons. While issues are the same and that may require similar approaches, the medical condition of diabetes mellitus is an added burden that makes treatment much more challenging. Both dentist and patient take more precautions and enter into a higher level of commitment for treatment plan success.

Diabetics are generally poor wound healers. Due to often times uncontrolled blood sugar levels, these patients cannot just have tooth extractions, root canal therapy, implantation, ordinary prophylaxis or any surgery. They need meticulous preparations to ready them for such procedures. For example, diabetics need to normalize their blood sugar first before a dental procedure as the resultant wound tend to heal very slowly. In that time, complications may also arise.

These patients also suffer from dry mouth syndrome. It is an effect of the disease. With no or very little saliva, the diabetic’s teeth are more prone to bacterial attack, starting cavities and tooth decay. Saliva is supposed to help hydrate the mouth, washing away food debris and disabling colonization of bacteria. The patient needs to take fluids or water constantly. Likewise, due to dry mouth, ulcers are common, appearing on gums and soft tissue.

Periodontal disease is more common among diabetics. It is in fact considered a complication of diabetes. Severe periodontal disease can increase blood sugar, contributing to increased periods of time when the body functions with a high blood sugar. This puts people with diabetes at increased risk for diabetic complications, from nerve paralysis to blindness, kidney disease, heart attack or stroke. Dentists and doctors agree that control of blood sugar is the best protection against periodontal disease.

If diabetics are compliant with their medications, insulin, exercise, and proper nutrition, they can expect to live normal lives. If they are into foot care, eye examinations, they must also mind their dental health. Regular dental visits are a must, cleanings, and proper oral hygiene at home, to keep their risks at bay.

Caring for the Diabetic Patient in Bellingham

Bellingham dentistry believes that the diabetic patient who takes care of his oral health as well as his other concerns is a happier, healthier patient leading a normal life. For a consultation, give us a call.

Dental Implants: Replacement for Missing Teeth

Are You an Ideal Candidate for Implants?

Currently, many dentists and patients are embracing dental implants when fixed bridges and removable dentures used to be popular choices for missing teeth. This treatment gives a natural look and feel in the mouth, protects healthy bone and keeps natural teeth in place. With their predictable outcomes, they are built to last a lifetime.

Are you a good candidates for dental implants?

If you have healthy gums, sufficient and good quality bone in your jaw, and a commitment to proper oral hygiene, you can make a fine candidate for implants. Some may not be ideal candidates, but that depends on your dentist’s judgment and the severity of the patient’s condition. Still it is the health of your gums and jaw bone that counts.

Young patients, whose bones are still growing and lacking maturity, are not ideal for implants; nor are heavy smokers, excessive alcohol users, those who’ve had high-dose radiation to the head and neck, and those with severely depressed immune system. With implant surgery, their healing will significantly slow down, possibly contributing to implant failure.

Other patient groups not ideal for dental implants are pregnant women whose consistency of teeth and gums have altered, teeth grinders, chronic or systemic disease sufferers like those with uncontrolled diabetes, connective-tissue disease, and hemophilia. Bleeding gums, brittleness of bone, and frequent infections jeopardize implant treatment success.

Depending on the dentist’s discretion and after proper evaluation, these patients can still be candidates. As long as there is still sufficient quantity and quality of jaw bone, adequately healthy gum tissue to work on, implants can still be an option for your missing teeth.

Implants for Missing Teeth in Bellingham

Are you ready for implants? If you are committed to proper oral hygiene and regular follow-ups, know from your Bellingham dentist if you are a candidate for dental implants.

Keeping Regular Dental Appointments: A Good Habit

When is Your Next Dental Appointment?

Something is always keeping you from making it, isn’t it? You think that since you’re into good oral hygiene – best choice toothbrush, paste and floss, proper techniques, faithful regularity – you may not need to see the dentist yet. However, that does not guarantee a caries-free existence.

Though it can significantly reduce your risks for developing tooth decay, you cannot make accurate assessment of each tooth state of health as a professional can. You are likely to miss beginning cavities, misjudge gum swelling, or not know root and jawbone conditions. Regular dental appointments take the guesswork out of oral health maintenance.

The American Dental Association recommends you come for visits every six months. That’s because it’s essential for the maintenance of healthy teeth and gums. Consider dental check ups for regular cleaning at least twice a year. It’s a standard hygiene routine so that your dentist gets to see any forming disease state of your oral structures.

As part of a thorough dental examination, each tooth will be examined for tooth decay, cracks, misalignment, or discoloration He will pay special attention to plaque and tartar because they can build up in a very short time especially if oral hygiene is poor. The health of your gums will be evaluated, he’ll perform a head and neck examination, a face examination, and look into the mouth for any indications of diabetes, vitamin deficiencies, or oral cancer. He will also include examination of your saliva, bite, and jaw movement.

Aside from health and cosmetic reasons, regular appointments are small dental lessons to keep in mind. You will learn about the pros and cons of certain habits you may have acquired that will impact dental health, and will be trained to look at signs and symptoms of potential hazards.

Keeping Dental Appointments in Bellingham

Over at Dr. Tetrick, we help you remember your appointments with our regular and friendly follow-ups. Visits to us can turn into a healthy habit, being your health partners every step of the way.