WatchNutrition & Your Teeth
What you eat can protect your teeth or quietly damage them
Aside from brushing and flossing, few things influence your cavity risk as much as what you eat. The bacteria in your mouth feed on sugars and certain carbohydrates, then release acids that pull minerals out of your enamel. Acidic drinks such as sodas and sports drinks erode that enamel directly, and pairing the two does the most harm of all.
The video lays out the science in plain language. Each snack or sip of a sugary or acidic drink drops the pH in your mouth and kicks off an acid attack. The longer that food lingers on your teeth, and the more often you reach for it through the day, the more minerals your enamel loses, until a cavity takes hold.
Your mouth fights back, though, with a defense system of its own. Saliva rinses away debris and carries the calcium and phosphate that rebuild enamel, and you can boost its flow by chewing sugar-free gum or eating a small piece of cheese after a meal to help neutralize acids. Easing off between-meal snacking gives your teeth time to recover as well.
Tooth-friendly eating habits pay lifelong dividends, and they're easiest to build early in kids. Bring your nutrition questions to your next visit at Brammeier Family Dental, and we'll talk through specific changes that fit how your family actually eats.
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