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School Lunches and Your Children’s Teeth

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

A healthy school lunch can help maintain good oral health and establish good nutritional habits in kids and teenagers. The following tips can help you learn how to prepare a lunch that best meets your child’s dental and nutritional needs.

  1. For snacks, send fruits, vegetables or cheese in your child’s lunchbox.
  2. The best fruit choices are those containing more water, such as: apples, grapes, pears, cantaloupes, and other melons.
  3. Any type of aged cheese is a good choice, such as: Swiss, Cheddar or Monterey Jack. You can also use cookie cutters to cut the cheese into fun shapes. Some studies have suggested that aged cheese can actually help to prevent tooth decay.
  4. Raw broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, cucumbers and celery are excellent vegetable choices.
  5. Try some different healthy foods or low carb snacks that your children may like.

The following foods are sticky and/or chewy and should be avoided because they stick to the teeth and saliva is unable to wash the sugar away.

  • Raisins
  • Honey
  • Dried figs
  • Peanut butter cookies
  • Jelly beans
  • Lollipops
  • Hard candy

We cannot follow our children around all the time to make sure they are eating healthy and brushing their teeth, but we can have some peace of mind knowing that we are helping to promote good oral health by providing them with their nutritional needs while they are at school.

Thank you for reading.  I encourage you to leave comments or questions below.  For more information on my practice, please visit www.elitesacramentodentist.com

Your friendly dentist,
Dr. Sarah Po
August 18, 2010
Source:  http://dentistry.about.com/od/childrensdentistry/a/kidsnutrition.htm

Categories : Healthy Teeth
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What Your Saliva Says About You

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

The next time you think “it’s only saliva”, consider this…

Your saliva contains mostly water, but it also contains electrolytes, bacteria, viruses, fungi, proteins, and secretions from your nose and lungs.  You may see TV detectives on CSI or Law and Order collect a suspect’s saliva to get a DNA sample.  That is because cells from the lining of your mouth can also be found in saliva, and these cells contain DNA.  A “cheek swab” is actually the more accurate way of obtaining someone’s DNA.

Saliva also provides clues about what you have been doing.  For instance, it can reveal whether you have been using recreational drugs such as cocaine, barbiturates, and marijuana.  In the future, scientists hope to use saliva samples to detect levels of certain medications in the body.  They also hope to use saliva as a way to detect disease in the future.

Some people believe it is helpful to lick their wounds because they’ve heard that saliva can be a disinfectant.  The truth is that our mouths are full of bacteria, and those bacteria can cause a cut to become infected if you lick it.  So, contrary to the popular expression, please do NOT lick your wounds.

Thank you for reading.  I encourage you to leave comments or questions below.  For more information on my practice, please visit www.elitesacramentodentist.com

Your friendly dentist,
Dr. Sarah Po
July 28, 2010

Sources:  http://health.msn.com/health-topics/oral-care/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=100259909

Categories : Healthy Teeth
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Stress Causes Bad Breath Epidemic

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Of all the idiotic, trivial things that can ruin a person’s life, bad breath has to rank high on anyone’s list of the humiliating tricks fate can play on us. A magazine in Japan sounds the alarm: our collective breath, already bad, is getting worse.

Blame stress. High standards and feverish competition make Japan a stressful place at the best of times, which these recessionary times are not. Assuming the diagnosis of recession halitosis holds, our breath should sweeten as the economy recovers—if the economy recovers.

The article opens with a personal anecdote concerning a certain “Mr. A,” a 31-year-old advertising company employee who, always careful about brushing and flossing, was all the more chagrined to note unmistakable signs of repugnance on the face of a female colleague he was chatting up.

How strange. Why should his breath be foul? His health was good, his stomach apparently fine. True, he was in a state of some anxiety over his precarious finances. Also, lately his mouth often felt strangely dry. Could that be significant?

It is indeed, says Ichiro Saito, a dentistry professor at Tsurumi University and author of a book on “dry mouth” syndrome. The number of patients he’s seeing who suffer from it has increased dramatically over the past five years. Based on his own practice and other research, he estimates 30 million Japanese may be afflicted with it.

The usual causes, stress aside, are aging and medicinal side effects. But Saito was noticing a sharp rise in the number of young sufferers, many of them under stress, though not necessarily economy-related. One of his patients, a company man in his 30s, was being persistently harassed by an older subordinate resentful of his relatively lowly status. Another patient, a “desk worker” in his 20s, found his mouth drying as a romantic relationship turned sour.

Why should stress cause bad breath? As a rule, Saito describes in the article, a person secretes 1.5 liters of saliva a day. Salivation is controlled by the autonomic nervous system. Have a relaxing massage and notice the flow increase. Quarrel with your boss and your mouth dries. If you think of saliva as a kind of natural mouthwash, the rest of the explanation is easily inferred—dry equals unclean.

There are those who would say that if bad breath is your biggest worry, your life is on a pretty even keel. But it’s not necessarily so. Surveys consistently show that women are acutely sensitive to a man’s mouth odors. One 20-year-old woman the magazine speaks to sums it up clearly and bluntly: “I don’t care how good-looking a guy is, if his mouth smells like poison gas, I won’t kiss him!”

So chew gum, men, and carry a water bottle with you for emergency sips when you get that dry-mouth feeling. And chew your food thoroughly. That’s something we’re apt to neglect in hurried, stressful times. In doing so, we don’t make our stress any easier to bear.

And perhaps, most important of all, practice meticulous oral hygiene and visit your dentist on a very regular basis!

Thank you for reading. I encourage you to leave comments or questions below. To learn more about my practice, click on the link www.elitesacramentodentist.com

Your friendly dentist,
Dr. Sarah Po
Apr. 1, 2010

Source:  http://www.japantoday.com/category/kuchikomi/view/stress-causes-bad-breath-epidemic

Categories : Bad Breath
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