Nutrition and Teeth
As today is Halloween, this is a good time to talk about "Nutrition and Your Teeth"
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It has long been known that good nutrition and a well-balanced diet is one of the best defenses for your oral health. Providing your body with the right amounts of vitamins and minerals helps your teeth and gums-as well as your immune system-stay strong and ward off infection, decay and disease.
Harmful acids and bacteria in your mouth are left behind from eating foods high in sugar and carbohydrates. These include carbonated beverages, some kinds of fruit juices, and many kinds of starch foods like pasta, bread and cereal.
Children's Nutrition and Teeth
Good eating habits that begin in early childhood can go a long way to ensuring a lifetime of good oral health.
Children should eat foods rich in calcium and other kinds of minerals, as well as a healthy balance of the essential food groups like vegetables, fruits, dairy products, poultry and meat. Fluoride supplements may be helpful if you live in a community without fluoridated water, but consult with our office first. (Be aware that sugars are even found in some kinds of condiments, as well as fruits and even milk.)
Allowing your children to eat excessive amounts of junk food (starches and sugars)-including potato chips,
cookies, crackers, soda, even artificial fruit rollups and granola bars-only places them at risk for serious
oral health problems, including obesity, osteoporosis and diabetes. The carbonation found in soda, for
example, can actually erode tooth enamel. Encourage your child to use a straw when drinking soda; this will
help keep at least some of the carbonated beverage away from the teeth.
Smart Snacks for
Healthy Teeth
There's no discounting the importance of continuing a healthy balanced diet
throughout your adult life.
What's wrong with sugary snacks, anyway?
Sugary snacks taste so
good — but they aren't so good for your teeth or your body. The candies, cakes, cookies and other sugary
foods that kids love to eat between meals can cause tooth decay. Some sugary foods have a lot of fat in
them, too. Kids who consume sugary snacks eat many different kinds of sugar every day, including table
sugar (sucrose) and corn sweeteners (fructose). Starchy snacks can also break down into sugars once they're
in your mouth.
How do sugars attack your teeth?
Invisible germs called bacteria live in
your mouth all the time. Some of these bacteria form a sticky material called plaque on the surface of the
teeth. When you put sugar in your mouth, the bacteria in the plaque gobble up the sweet stuff and turn it
into acids. These acids are powerful enough to dissolve the hard enamel that covers your teeth. That's how
cavities get started. If you don't eat much sugar, the bacteria can't produce as much of the acid that eats
away enamel.
How can I "snack smart" to protect myself from tooth decay?
Before you start
munching on a snack, ask yourself what's in the food you've chosen. Is it loaded with sugar? If it is, think
again. Another choice would be better for your teeth. And keep in mind that certain kinds of sweets can do
more damage than others. Gooey or chewy sweets spend more time sticking to the surface of your teeth.
Because sticky snacks stay in your mouth longer than foods that you quickly chew and swallow, they give your
teeth a longer sugar bath. You should also think about when and how often you eat snacks. Do you nibble on
sugary snacks many times throughout the day, or do you usually just have dessert after dinner? Damaging
acids form in your mouth every time you eat a sugary snack. The acids continue to affect your teeth for at
least 20 minutes before they are neutralized and can't do any more harm. So, the more times you eat sugary
snacks during the day, the more often you feed bacteria the fuel they need to cause tooth decay.
If
you eat sweets, it's best to eat them as dessert after a main meal instead of several times a day between
meals. Whenever you eat sweets — in any meal or snack — brush your teeth well with a fluoride toothpaste
afterward.
When you're deciding about snacks, think about:
•   The number of times a day
you eat sugary snacks
•   How long the sugary food stays in your mouth
•   The texture of the sugary
food (Chewy? Sticky?)
If you snack after school, before bedtime, or other times during the day, choose
something without a lot of sugar or fat. There are lots of tasty, filling snacks that are less harmful to
your teeth—and the rest of your body — than foods loaded with sugars and low in nutritional value. Snack
smart!
Low-fat choices like raw vegetables, fresh fruits, or whole-grain crackers or bread are smart
choices. Eating the right foods can help protect you from tooth decay and other diseases. Next time you
reach for a snack, pick a food from the list inside or make up your own menu of non-sugary, low-fat snack
foods from the basic food groups.
How can you snack smart? Be choosy!
Pick a variety of foods from these groups:
Fresh
fruits and raw
vegetables
Berries
Oranges
Grapefruit
Melons
Pineapple
Pears
Tangerines
Broccoli
Celery
Carrots
Cucumbers
Tomatoes
Unsweetened
fruit and vegetable juices
Canned fruits in natural juices
Grains
Bread
Plain
bagels
Unsweetened cereals
Unbuttered popcorn
Tortilla chips (baked, not fried)
Pretzels
(low-salt)
Pasta
Plain crackers
Milk and dairy products
Low or non-fat milk
Low or
non-fat yogurt
Low or non-fat cheese
Low or non-fat cottage cheese
Meat, nuts and
seeds
Chicken
Turkey
Sliced meats
Pumpkin seeds
Sunflower
seeds
Nuts
Others
(these snacks combine foods from the different
groups)
Pizza
Tacos
Remember to:
•   Choose sugary foods less often
•   Avoid
sweets between meals
•   Eat a variety of low or non-fat foods from the basic groups
•   Brush your
teeth with fluoride toothpaste after snacks and meals
Note to parents
The foods listed in
this leaflet have not all been tested for their decay-causing potential. However, knowledge to date
indicates that they are less likely to promote tooth decay than are some of the heavily sugared foods
children often eat between meals.
Candy bars aren't the only culprits. Foods such as pizza, breads, and
hamburger buns may also contain sugars. Check the label. The new food labels identify sugars and fats on the
Nutrition Facts panel on the package. Keep in mind that brown sugar, honey, molasses and syrups also react
with bacteria to produce acids, just as refined table sugar does. These foods also are potentially damaging
to teeth.
Your child's meals and snacks should include a variety of foods from the basic food groups,
including fruits and vegetables; grains, including breads and cereals; milk and dairy products; and meat,
nuts and seeds. Some snack foods have greater nutritional value than others and will better promote your
child's growth and development. However, be aware that even some fresh fruits, if eaten in excess, may
promote tooth decay. Children should brush their teeth with fluoride toothpaste after snacks and meals. (So
should you!)
Please note: These general recommendations may need to be adapted for children on special diets because
of diseases or conditions that interfere with normal nutrition.