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Preventing Milk Bottle Cavities

November 4, 2011

“Milk bottle cavities,” or “baby bottle tooth decay” (BBTD), is a condition that results from improper feeding of babies by their parents or caregivers. It is a devastating pattern of decay that causes the teeth to decay all around the gum line. Often, the teeth will even break off at the gum line, causing a disfiguring appearance, pain, and abscessed teeth that must be extracted or have root canal treatment. Replacement of baby teeth is possible but very difficult and expensive, and because children lose baby teeth until age 12, this can lead to years of complications. The eruption of the permanent replacement teeth can also be affected by this condition, so the ramifications can last long past childhood.

The decay sequence involves the sugars in the bottle’s liquid. Although drinks like milk and fruit juice sound healthy and even good for you, they are dangerous when children are put to bed with a bottle. Milk contains lactose sugar and fruit drinks contain fructose sugar. Sugars are eaten by the bacteria on the teeth, which can result in decay. The decay process requires three things: a tooth, plaque, and sugar. So once a child gets a tooth (around six months old) decay can occur.

Three things to keep in mind:

1.) Teeth

Once teeth erupt in the mouth they need to be brushed; that means mom and dad. Letting children play with a toothbrush is good, clean fun and can get them familiar with brushing.

2.) Plaque/Bacteria

The child’s mouth becomes colonized by bacteria from their parents. The bacteria form a sticky adhesive matrix on the teeth that is full of millions and millions of sugar eating bacteria. This is the film that we are removing when we brush and floss.

3.) Sugars

Bacteria live on sugar. Milk has lactose sugar; fruit juices have fructose. Manmade drinks like Gatorade and Hi-C contain various types of sugars. The waste product from bacterial digestion of sugar is acid. The plaque layer of the bacteria holds the acid against the teeth and eats away at the calcium in the outside enamel layer of the tooth. This weakens the tooth’s hardness. Because baby teeth have thinner enamel they decay much more rapidly. Once exposed to sugar, the bacteria make acid for twenty minutes.

What makes nighttime bottles so dangerous is the length of time the teeth are bathed in sugar and therefore acid. Compounding the effects of the acid is the fact that saliva flow decreases at night and plaque grows much more rapidly during sleep. Therefore, the maximum acid production occurs when the bacteria are most plentiful.

Conclusion

We all want to be great parents, and we certainly don’t want to be responsible for causing prolonged pain and anguish to our children. Prevention of “baby bottle tooth decay” is simple. Give your little one only water at sleep time.

Aging, Root Cavities and LifeSavers Part 2

October 5, 2011

Last time we explored why we have an increased risk of cavities on the roots of the teeth as we get older.  Today we are addressing what can be done to keep those roots cavity free.  As we age our dexterity diminishes, so brushing and flossing becomes more difficult.  This allows more plaque to accumulate.  Below I have delineated specific things you can do to hold decay at bay.

  • Use an electric tooth brush.   It is essential.   With decreased ability to handle a brush and floss, the electric brush does the work.  You just need to place the brush at the gum line.   I recommend them for all patients, especially the elderly.  Get a good one!  I like the Sonicare or the Oral B.
  • Flossing is essential for removal of plaque on the surfaces between the teeth.  That’s 40 percent of the tooth.  Many elderly folks cannot manipulate floss on cramped or arthritic fingers.  If you can’t floss, rubber tip cones, proxy brushes or stimudents are aides you can use that will greatly help get at those in between the teeth areas.
  • More frequent visits to the dentist for routine cleanings. I recommend 3-4 cleanings a year for elderly patients, especially those who consistently show up with heavy plaque at their cleanings. If you can’t do it, let us help you!  The longer plaque sits on your gums and teeth, the more likely decay will develop.
  • Fluoride can help harden root surfaces and therefore make them less susceptible to cavity formation.  Use a concentrated fluoride rinse or tooth paste at home.  Get fluoride treatments in the office.  We can paint a varnish on the surfaces that has a longer lasting benefit.
  • Many older people combat their dry mouths with sucking candies.   The sucking candies help increase saliva flow which makes their mouths more lubricated and comfortable.  Many people suck on them all day.  My parents have bowls of them around the house.   That’s fine;  BUT… they need to be sugarless!  Sugared candies that you suck on are the absolute worst thing you can use.  When you suck on a candy that is sugared, the plaque on the teeth creates acids for hours.  When you suck on these throughout the day, the teeth are bathed in acids continually! Get sugar free candies and all is OK.  Lifesavers make them and so does Jolly Ranchers, along with other candy makers. Sugar free gum is also good for combating the acids that bacteria in the plague create.  As a matter of fact dentists recommend sugar free gum after eating if you can’t brush right away.
  • Do yourself and your teeth a favor, throw them a sugar free Lifesaver!

Aging, Root Cavities, and Lifesavers

September 6, 2011

Modern medicine has done an unbelievable job of extending our life spans and the quality of health we have in our later years. Modern dentistry, too, is helping to play a part in all this. Years ago, people would have false teeth or dentures in their midlife, but today’s it’s not unusual for people to live to a ripe old age with their own teeth. But keeping teeth healthy and cavity free as we age requires extra work, because aging actually makes us more susceptible to cavities. The main reason for this is that, with age, we get varying degree of gum recession and bone loss around our teeth, which leaves their roots exposed. These roots are softer than the rest of your teeth and aren’t protected by enamel, so it’s much easier for decay to set in and cause trouble.

The plaque that forms on teeth is made up of the bacteria responsible for decay. Diligent removal of that plaque through brushing and flossing is essential to preventing root cavities. If the plaque sits along the gum line, cavities will form. The roots are so thin and soft that decay can advance to the nerve area of the tooth very quickly.

Saliva helps wash away plaque before it forms, but as we age our saliva flow decreases. Sometimes this is due to certain medical conditions we may develop, such as Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, Parkinson’s disease, and anemia. Drugs that are taken to treat certain diseases can also results in less saliva. In fact, over 1,000 drugs list dry mouth as a side effect, including some anti-allergy medications, decongestants, epilepsy medications, and drugs that treat high blood pressure. Muscle relaxants, anti-anxiety drugs and sedatives also have this effect. The result of this decreased saliva flow is increased plaque along the gum line, which require increased attention to its removal.

People often combat dry mouth by sucking on hard candies like LifeSavers. These candies will increase saliva, which helps lubricate the mouth, but that sweet succulence comes with a price.

In our next blog, we’ll further explore the dangers of these seemingly innocent treats.