5 Easy Tips for a Clean Mouth, Fresh Breath & Healthy Gums, Austin Dentist Emily Craft
5 Easy Tips for a Clean Mouth, Fresh Breath & Healthy Gums, Austin Dentist Emily Craft In this video, Austin dentist, Emily Craft, describes 5 simple tips for improving your oral hygiene for fresh breath, healthy gums and overall a clean mouth. These practical tips and secrets will help you understand oral hygiene so you can actually improve the health of your mouth and gums. The secret to fresh breath and healthy gums is to brush regularly and to floss at least once a day. The left over food and bacteria in the mouth cannot be removed simply by brushing, and it's important to floss to maintain healthy gums and fend off bad breath. Pecan Park Family Dentistry provides patients with a relaxing, comfortable, and stress-free experience from start to finish, focusing on educating patients about their complete oral health while providing exceptional dental care for adults and children of all ages. Visit Pecan Park Family Dentistry online: www.PecanParkSmiles.com This video was produced by Psychetruth www.youtube.com www.twitter.com www.facebook.com www.myspace.com © Copyright 2011 Target Public Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Toothbrush toothbrushing teeth tooth clean health healthy toothpaste breath "bad breath" loose gum disease "gum disease" infection gross mouth "oral health" periodontitis Austin dentist bleeding blood oral hygiene gingivitis perio bacteria plaque fluoride tips secrets "how to" how to prevent cavities secrets truth fresh sugar floss flossing water drink ...
Does Flossing Really Matter? Tips for Healthy Gums & Fresh Breath, Austin Dentist Emily Craft
Does Flossing Really Matter? Tips for Healthy Gums & Fresh Breath, Austin Dentist Emily Craft Does flossing really matter? Why does your dentist always hound you about flossing? In this video, Austin dentist, Emily Craft, describes the process of gum disease, gingivitis and periodontal disease and why flossing is so important. These practical tips and secrets will help you understand oral hygiene so you can actually improve the health of your mouth and gums. The secret to fresh breath and healthy gums is to brush regularly and to floss at least once a day. The left over food and bacteria in the mouth cannot be removed simply by brushing, and it's important to floss to maintain healthy gums and fend off bad breath. Pecan Park Family Dentistry provides patients with a relaxing, comfortable, and stress-free experience from start to finish, focusing on educating patients about their complete oral health while providing exceptional dental care for adults and children of all ages. Visit Pecan Park Family Dentistry online: www.PecanParkSmiles.com This video was produced by Psychetruth www.youtube.com www.twitter.com www.facebook.com www.myspace.com © Copyright 2011 Target Public Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Toothbrush toothbrushing teeth tooth clean health healthy toothpaste breath "bad breath" loose gum disease "gum disease" infection gross mouth periodontitis Austin dentist bleeding blood oral hygiene gingivitis perio bacteria plaque fluoride tips secrets "how to" how to ...
What are the health benefits of onions?
Other than terrific flavor and bad breath, what do onions bring to the table?
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What are the health benefits, if any, of eating onions?
Is there a particular way in which they are good for you? ...besides as a flavor in food, or something to top your hamburger.
Notable health benefits?
Dangers? (besides the bad breath, lol)
*Please note, this is NOT a cooking question, per se*
Periodontitis and bad breath?
I've always taken care of my teeth. I eat healthy and exercise. Im in great shape and have had blood work done and results came back as excellent. I've gone to the dentist twice a year since my 20's. Im 45 years old now. Recently I have been told I have periodontitis. How does a reasonably healthy person get periodontitis if I brush, floss and use mouthwash twice a day? I am an excellent brusher and flosser too. Dentist never sees hardly any plaque nor cavities on my teeth. But he says the gums bleed a lot when he cleans them. He also probed my gums and they came back as 1,2 and 3's. I have one deep pocket at 4mm. Otherwise ideal.
I also have bad breath. Does this mean I will be plagued with bad breath the rest of my life? This is not what I want. I can see my confidence going down the toilet.
Any suggestions?
My dentist tells me I have “Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis” or ANUG for short. What should I do?
Previosly I was told it was periodontitis, now it's this weird sounding thing! Previously I was given an antibiotic called Flagyl (Metronidazole) on 3 differnet occasions, didn't do much good. I'm a smoker and my dentist tells me that this is the cause of it? Trying to quit now by taking pils called Champix (Chantix in USA), might work. I've read that I should take penicillin (according to wiki!) but was never offered that or told I should take it?
Should I take penicillin? Is it true as the dentist is saying that if I stop smoking it'll clear up, I have my suspicions whether that is correct?
Yeah, I've read that it's often people with HIV/AIDS (but not confined to them) that get that but I am not HIV, thank god!
Over the last few weeks I have been to 3 differnet dentists trying to get an opinion, 2 have said its periodontitis and the most recent one said it was ANUG. I would go with it being ANUG as the last dentist spent the most time examining it, xrays, little spy camera thing etc.
What has me puzzled as to whether it is actually ANUG is that my gums don't bleed much at all, no bad breath, no soreness when I eat...these are all listed as indications of ANUG but I have none of them?
Just to update, I got a second opinion and was told I don't have ANUG! Instead was told the problem was that I needed a filling, no answer given by the new dentist I saw as to what the gum problem was.....unbelievable!
How to deal with a tooth problem?
I generally take good care of my teeth. I brush them regularly, and I do floss on occasion, but still not quite as much as I should. The other day, I noticed that the gums around one of my teeth in the front were a little bit irritated, and every time I bite into something like an apple, or even put something near my mouth, that awful smell you get from plaque/bad breath is there. I've flossed several times since I noticed it, to try and get rid of it, but nothing. In fact, it just irritates the gums more, and it still smells bad, but only in that area. I'm trying to be gentle, but I don't know what's wrong.
Also, I cannot see a dentist for another month (6 month rule), and I am away at school anyways.
What is it? What can I do?
Do I have early staged gingivitis!? PLEASE HELP!!!!?
Ok I'm really scared and freaked out and confused here.
two of my teeth have these little like vertical nicks oh the gum bellow them. And they bleed when I brush there and it hurts a bit too when I brush there.
Then yesterday part of my gums over top of a top tooth swelled up and now there is this reddish brown area between the tooth/gum that is swelled and the one that isn't. That just randomly happened yesterday after I got out of the shower. I went to brush and it started bleeding like crazy (the top gum, the bottom one bled a bit though the nicks in the gum).
Last night when I brushed them I have never spit more blood in my life! And even though I brush 2-3 times a day and floss every time afterward I sometimes get bad breath. I brush well, I brush my gums and all that.
The gums only bleed when I brush them not the teeth. The gums aren't like movable or anything and the teeth are stationary too.
I go to the dentist once a year (I know, I know. once every six)
I'm really scared out of my skin here! The gums are still pink, the worst I have seen is a hot pink type thing.
Do you have any tips as to how I am to kind of solve this problem? I heard if you catch it in the early stages you can probably do something about it... I just don't know what that something is.
I'm 14 by the way, if that even means anything...