Everything
Your Mother
(or Anyone else)
Never Told You About Sugar and Decay
Dental decay is still the most common disease
in America. Very few people manage to avoid it. Sugar is the Number
One cause. Most people do not know the real truth about sugar
and decay. we printed a dozen of the most common myths about sugar
for your information along with the real truth. See how many myths
you actually thought were true. After you read this and make some
changes in how you eat, pass this along to a friend, because this
could benefit them, too.
Myth #1-
You have to eat some sugar for energy.
Fact - Not
true. The body cannot turn table sugar directly into energy. The
body must convert table sugar (sucrose) into glucose to burn it
for energy. This is exactly what happens to all carbohydrates
and fats we eat, like breads, pasta, and potatoes, as well as
fruit sugar (fructose) and sugar from grains (maltose). You
never need any table sugar at all. Ever!
Myth #2 - Some
people just have soft teeth.
Fact - Just
like the three little pigs' houses, some people's teeth are definitely
stronger than others. However, even the little pig with the straw
house was doing fine until the Big Bad Wolf came along. People
with naturally harder teeth, like the pig living in the brick
house, can take more sugar without crumbling, but people with
naturally weaker teeth won't get decay either if they limit their
sugar contacts.
Myth #3 - If
you brush right after eating, you can brush away the sugar before
it causes decay.
Fact - The
germs in the plaque begin to eat the sugar as soon as it enters
your mouth. By the time you start to brush, it's way to late.
Myth #4 - I have nothing to worry about because I only eat natural foods.
Fact - This is one of the biggest lies of all. "Natural "just
means grown from the soil. There are other "natural substances
like alcohol, tobacco, and cocaine that aren't very good for you
either. The only difference between brown ,or "natural"
sugar and white processed sugar is the color. Sugar is sugar.
Myth #5 - I brush my teeth 5 or 6 times a day, so I don't need to floss.
Fact - Quite
frequent sugar contacts cause much more decay. The truth is that the number of times per day that you eat sugar is more significant
than the total amount of sugar you eat.
Follow this logic. the germs in the plaque
are very small. In the first bite of a sugar food, they get all
the sugar they can eat. It takes the germs about 30 minutes to
digest the sugar and turn it to acid before they are ready to
eat more sugar. After the first bite of sugar, they are full.
If you eat a pie in one sitting, that's
one sugar contact. If you cut it up into 24 pieces and eat one
per hour, it is 24 sugar contacts. It may be no less fattening,
but it is twenty-four times as decay-causing as eating it in one
sitting.
Myth #7 - If
you avoid candy, cakes, and gooey desserts, you won't get decay.
Fact - Most
of the sugar consumed in America, about 150 pounds per person
per year, is not in candy and cakes. The problem is that manufacturers
put sugar into all sorts of things like ketchup, white bread,
spaghetti sauce, mayonnaise, and most processed foods. That Big
Mac with special sauce on a bun is just as decay-producing as
the ice cream shake.
Myth # 8 - Adults outgrow decay, so they can eat more sugar than kids.
Fact - That
is like saying that you can outgrow the damaging effects of bullets.
In our office, the real truth is that the number of cavities per
adult patient is much higher than the number of cavities per child
patient.
Myth # 9 - Fluoride
is mainly for kids. It doesn't help adults.
Fact - Wrong
again. Adults can get great benefit from fluorides applied to
their teeth on a daily or weekly basis because fluoride hardens
the outside of the tooth. If the outside is harder, decay can't
start.
Myth # 10 - I
can eat all the sugar I want because my teeth are all filled already.
Fact - The
filling doesn't seal against the tooth as well as a solid tooth
that has no filling. Sugar can seep into these cracks more easily,
so filled teeth are actually more likely to decay again than
unfilled teeth.
Always ask the dentist if a cavity is a
new one, and caused by sugar or due to a broken old filling so
you can understand what your problem is.
Myth #12 - You
just can't get sugar contacts down to the three a day range.
Fact - These
days, with all the processed foods, it isn't easy. But now that
you have some more information, you'll see how easy it really
is. You just need to pick and choose.
Some Final Advice
Since sugar does cause decay, limit the
number of times you eat it per day to the minimum. Be more discriminating.
Read labels. If you like a totally decadent dessert, go for it.
Avoid the other sugar contacts during the day that may not be
that important to you, such as ketchup on a sandwich or jam on
your toast.
Avoid the accidental sugar contacts. Those
are times when you really don't intend to eat sugar, but it comes
included in the food you buy. Start to read labels. You'll be
amazed.
Do substitute fruit sugar or malt sugar
for table sugar because it is much less decay-producing, pound
for pound, than table sugar.
Go for dental check-ups at least twice
or three times a year and have x-rays every 6 to 9 months. Modern
x-rays are not at all dangerous, and they can detect decay when
the cavities are still small, before major damage has occurred.
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