Posts Tagged ‘Tooth Decay’
How To Treat Tooth Decay
Tooth decay, otherwise known as dental caries, is as considered one of the most common conditions worldwide; in fact, it is second to the common cold as the most common health problem. It affects everyone, young or old alike. It can be caused by milk and baby bottle for an infant, sweet foods and improper oral hygiene for children, and inappropriate diet and vices for older people. Since tooth decay has an impact in a person’s self-esteem and health in general, it is important that tooth decay is treated promptly and well.
Treatment for dental caries can be categorized into two – treatment for tooth decay at its onset, and treatment for tooth decay in its later stages.
If tooth decay has not yet destroyed the affected tooth, the usual methods of treatment are proper oral hygiene, fluoride, and regular check-ups to the dentist. This is because if tooth decay is diagnosed at an early stage, its progression can be blocked, future decays reversed, and unnecessary expenses prevented.
Proper oral hygiene, such as brushing and flossing, is a great way to prevent further damage, or to keep new decays from occurring. Using fluoride toothpaste or undergoing fluoride treatment, is another treatment advised by dentists to stop tooth decay before cavities are formed, and to reduce the chances of sensitive teeth that is a common complication of weakened teeth. Check-ups with the dentist are advised at least twice a year. This is so that your dentist can advise treatments if tooth decay is diagnosed, and can even help educate you in the proper caring of your teeth through pictures, and readings. Read the rest of this entry »
Prevent Tooth Decay Baby Bottle
PREVENTION
* Never leave your child in bed with a bottle.
* Avoid prolonged use of pacifiers.
* After every meal, rinse your child’s teeth and gums with a clean sponge or gauze pad to remove plaque.
* Start using dental floss between the teeth of children occur in the first baby teeth.
* Between meals, if your child needs another between meals, give him a bottle of clear fresh water.
* Do not fill your child’s bottle with sugar liquids such as punch, gelatin or sugary drinks.
* Make sure your child take fluoride in some way, especially if your water is not fluoridated.
* Observe your child’s teeth regularly and begin dental visits when teeth start coming.
Tooth Diseases

We all recognize the importance of keeping our mouths clean and neat, but mostly we spent time and care, so at any stage of life from birth, through adult, oral hygiene is important to prevent diseases that can be painful and lead to loss of teeth.
Dental Whitening Root Canal Treated

* A few years ago I managed this tooth and now I have a dark color.
* By an accident I was hit in the upper front teeth and after a while one of them was dark
* My son, the dentist did a root canal and the tooth now has a different color.
These comments are fortunately not too often heard, but they can happen. In the case of dental trauma without proper monitoring and treatment, the tooth in most cases this will change color.
The dental procedures that involve removing the pulp organ “Nerve” is often the case that eventually change color.
The cause of this phenomenon is due to: For the specified root canal or dental trauma, there is internal bleeding inside the tooth pigmentation and after a while the tooth is dark, because the blood hemoglobin is oxidized from a normal color to gray or dark brown. Read the rest of this entry »
Dental Amalgam
Clinical studies in patients over time have shown that dental fillings made with this material are durable and do not harm your overall health.
Dental amalgam is considered a filler material durable and versatile than has been in use for over 150 years and has restored the teeth of more than 1000 million people.
Dental amalgam contains a mixture of metals such as mercury, silver, copper and tin that are chemically linked together into a hard substance, stable and secure.
Suspicions that mercury amalgam is harmful to health is unfounded. Dental amalgam has been studied extensively, and has established a record of safety and effectiveness, unprecedented in relation to other dental fillings.
What do health organizations say about amalgam?
The California Dental Association (CDA). The Food and Drug adminitration, U.S. Public Health Service, World Health Organization, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institutes of Health, and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found in dental amalgam restoration material effectively. These public health organizations continue to monitor the literature and research to ensure public safety.
The Alzheimer’s Association says that “based on scientific evidence, there is no relationship between dental amalgam fillings and Alzheimer’s. . . Read the rest of this entry »
Dental Fluorosis
Excessive ingestion of fluoride during the early childhood years may damage the tooth-forming cells, leading to a defect in the enamel known as dental fluorosis. Teeth impacted by fluorosis have visible discoloration, ranging from white spots to brown and black stains.

Teeth with fluorosis also have an increased porosity of the enamel. In the milder forms, the porosity is mostly limited to the sub-surface enamel, whereas in the more advanced forms, the porosity impacts the surface enamel as well, resulting in extensive pitting, chipping, fracturing, and decay of the teeth. The discoloration induced by fluorosis – particularly in its advanced forms – can cause significant embarrassment and stress to the impacted child, resulting in adverse effects on esteem, emotional health, and career success.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, 32% of American children now have some form of dental fluorosis, with 2 to 4% of children having the moderate to severe stages (CDC 2005). While proponents of water fluoridation dismiss dental fluorosis as being simply a “cosmetic effect,” recent research indicates that the rate of bone fracture among children with fluorosis (even in the mild forms) is higher than the bone fracture rates among children with no fluorosis. As noted by Dr. Hardy Limeback, Head of Preventive Dentistry at the University of Toronto, “it is illogical to assume that tooth enamel is the only tissue affected by low daily doses of fluoride ingestion.”
Home Treatment of Halitosis
Halitosis is a condition caused by gum disease, tooth decay, mouth infections, tumors, malnutrition, etc., Which would cause bad breath, this is a problem of control as you exhale the air breathed, is as ‘move’ these odor molecules to the outside, so it must be remembered home treatment of halitosis to improve and eliminate this problem as detailed below.
Dental Cleaning: Possibly this is the best measure to alleviate this problem since when having a good dental cleaning will be killing bacteria that could not only aggravate the problem if these are possibly the production of oral malodor.
The main thing is to use a toothpaste also acknowledges that the brush is in good condition and complement this with a mouthwash. Perform after eating any food.
Parsley: This product offers a very viable cure to this problem because its components are able to quickly kill bacteria. You only need to boil in a pint of water three cloves, a pinch of ground cloves and some sprigs of parsley, after boiling, turn off and remove from heat, let stand for half an hour, filters and containers. This is used as a mouthwash, gargling several times a day. Read the rest of this entry »
Tooth Decay Baby Bottle
DEFINITION
The deterioration of the teeth by the bottle is a dental problem that can destroy the teeth of a child in the first 2 years.
CAUSES
The deterioration of the teeth by the bottle is produced by exposing the teeth to liquids containing sugars during long periods of time. Among these liquids are milk, juice, gelatin or other sugary liquids.
The tooth decay occurs in children who continue to suck for long periods of time (may happen, for example, if the mother falls asleep while the baby is nursing). The plaque of bacteria that is on the teeth uses these sugars as an energy source to form acids that attack tooth enamel.