Dental Erosion and Tea

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By Diliff – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6739706

As a dental professional I worry about growing phenomenon of dental erosion on patients teeth. Yesterday I saw 6 patients of which 5 of them had erosion on their teeth ranging from mild to very severe. There is not necessarily difference between different age groups any more. Dental erosion affects all the age groups and often it is due to ignorance – not knowing that something we do everyday basis is damaging our teeth. And damaging for good. With this post I hope to raise awareness of one very common habit many of us have that could damage the enamel of the tooth. That is drinking tea.

What is Erosion?

People often know what erosion means when it comes to for example coastal erosion (hence the photo of beautiful Seven Sisters, UK). But when I mention the word erosion to the patient, they often look perplexed.

Dental erosion is one type of tooth wear where tooth looses its structure due to chemical dissolution by acids. These erosive acids enter the mouth through two routes – from outside (food, drinks, medicine, supplements) or from inside of the individual (stomach acid due to gastric reflux or bulimia). The loss of the tooth structure is permanent. It won’t grow back. So the prevention of the dental erosion is the most important thing to do.

With this post I will not go into all the things that cause dental erosion as I have written it in my previous post How Diet Affects Your Teeth? But what I didn’t write on that post was something I didn’t know back then. You see, this profession is constant learning as long as you are receptive. I knew that fruit teas are acidic but what I did not know is that only two types of teas are safe to drink when it comes to tooth wear.

pH of Different Teas

There are plenty of studies about the pH levels of different teas. Just google words erosive potential of teas. When I did this I also run into some worrying sites like this one where incomplete advice is given to people. The effects on teeth is completely left out when talking about alkaline diet even though the mouth is one important part of your overall health.

What people following alkaline diet are thinking is that foods consumed will become alkaline in your body. But remember when acidic foods (lemon, lime, berries, apples etc) or drinks (e.g. herbal and fruity teas, carbonated drinks, juices) enter the mouth, they stay acidic. Lets take the lemon as an example. In the alkaline diet’s pH chart they state that lemon is very alkaline (pH 10). But when entering mouth, it is highly acidic (pH 2.0)

The same site advises people to drink hibiscus tea as alkaline tea. A revelation, also hibiscus is not alkaline when entering mouth. It is in fact the most acidic tea there can be (pH level <3.0). Any drink with pH level below 5,5 will cause erosion on enamel if consumed regularly.

It worries me that people actually follow these constricted advices blindly. I don’t blame them. Many people are clueless when it comes to matters of health. Everyone following alkaline diet should read this article to determine if there are enough health benefits of the alkaline diet to risk the health of the teeth. The only downfall of this article is that it is not writing about health risks of alkaline diet.

Erosion-Enhancers

The herbal and fruity teas are acidic but certain factors can make them even more erosive. These are exposure time and temperature of the drink.

Nowadays people carry their drinks with them in a travel mugs enabling them to sip it during e.g. commuting and perhaps some of it is left for them to drink when they reach their desk. If the drink is acidic tea it means prolonged exposure to acids and if repeated often, it will result in tooth erosion. If there is sugar or honey added to the drink it will be even more erosive and also cariogenic.

Also the hotter the drink is the more erosive it is. And these travel mugs keep the drink warm for a long period of time.

Warning Signs of Erosion

The first sign of dental erosion is normally sensitivity to cold or pressure (when brushing the teeth or touching the surface of the tooth with your finger nail. The latter us professional do not encourage to do). This should raise an alarm in your mind and you should go through your diet to find out if you are consuming something regularly that is too acidic to your teeth. You will find help from my post How Diet Affects Your Teeth. Remember that the best drink teeth-wise between the meals is tap water because it is alkaline.

Another sign of tooth wear is change in tooth colour. As the enamel gets permanently thinner, the yellower tooth structure the dentin under the enamel will start to show through. Your teeth will look yellower than before and no whitening done will change that as the whitening substance is not able to reach the dentin.

When the shape of your tooth is changing, the erosion is already severe. Thinning enamel will easily chip off making your teeth look less attractive than they used to be. Often people feel embarrassed about their teeth at this point.

So my message to you all is to prevent dental erosion! Think what you put in your mouth and how often you do that. Occasional acidic drink will not make any difference but when consumed often, it will cause problems.

Is Any Tea Safe to Drink?

Yes! The pH level of green tea and black tea are on the safe side. Black tea also contains fluoride which helps to prevent tooth erosion. But remember, they are only safe if no sugar (including honey) or lemon is added. Sugar will cause the pH level of the saliva to drop below 5,5 and lemon is very acidic like I mentioned already above.

Here are some studies for further reading

Erosive potential of herbal teas

International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR): Dental Erosion and Tea: A Systematic Review

BBC: “Sipping acidic fruit teas can wear away teeth, says study”

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How Diet Affects Your Teeth

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But I brush my teeth twice a day and floss them daily!”

I get cavities very easily. It runs in the family… We have weak teeth.”

Sound familiar? This is something I often hear when I tell patients they have a new cavity or early signs of them. Because my way of thinking is generally based on no-nonsense, I will not speak nonsense to my patients and therefore will correct any nonsense coming from their mouth. What I will say immediately to the person thinking bad teeth are hereditary is that there is no such thing as hereditary bad teeth. What can be hereditary is

  • diet and lifestyle habits (sort of… at least until you get to decide yourself what to eat and drink and how often)
  • bacteria (but not exactly hereditary, the baby is born without bacteria in mouth and bacteria will be transferred into baby’s mouth normally from the parents)
  • genetic susceptibility to periodontitis (but this does not mean you are doomed to have periodontitis)
  • position and the shape of the teeth

But it is only the diet and lifestyle habits that can be easily changed by person himself to such that is more tooth-friendly. So what is tooth-friendly and what’s not? I will tell you but I cannot do that before I tell you little bit about bacteria first.

Bacteria – the Beloved Enemy

There are bacteria in everyone’s mouth and so there should be. The bacteria keep the soft tissues healthy. Every day the bacteria try to find hiding and breeding places from our teeth forming this sticky glue around them. Bacteria and this glue we call plaque.

We can live in peace with the bacteria if we remove it regularly from the surfaces of our teeth. It is beneficial also to remove it from the surface of the tongue. Brushing twice a day with an electric toothbrush and cleaning between the teeth once a day (the best tool for you to use between the teeth should be checked at the dentist – preferably by the dental hygienist) will prevent the bacteria causing problems like cavities and gum disease.

But if the bacteria can stay in place for longer period of time, there will be consequences. Let’s first think about how it will affect the gums around the teeth.

Healthy gums will start to get inflammation after three days of bacteria presence (there is some individual variation to this) because the bacteria will produce toxins amongst other things. For example if you do not clean between the teeth for four days, the chances are high for you to notice bleeding from the gums when you finally decide to clean them. The bleeding is always a sign of an inflammation in the gum (gingivitis) caused by prolonged bacteria presence. It is never a sign of you doing something wrong with the tool you use. So consider the bleeding as a reminder for you to clean between the teeth more regularly as gingivitis can lead to more severe and irreversible type of gum disease (periodontitis).

The bacteria also produce acids from the carbohydrates in your diet. This is called the acid attack. The acids will affect the teeth.

The acids that the bacteria produce from the carbohydrates will make the pH of the mouth drop below 5,5 and this will remove minerals like calcium from the surface of the teeth. It is called demineralisation. The saliva neutralises these acids bacteria produce and also it is the saliva that will try to restore the lost minerals from the enamel but it is slightly slow process and normally after 30-45 minutes of finishing you dinner/snack the job is done and the pH has risen above 5,5. This is called remineralisation.

The teeth can take only certain amount of demineralisation per day without getting cavities. Too much demineralisation combined with inadequate oral hygiene habits will most certainly lead to decaying. Sometimes very fast decaying.

Not Necessarily What You Eat, but How You Eat It!

So now you know that the demineralisation will begin when you offer carbohydrates to the bacteria in your mouth. There are carbohydrates in pretty much everything we eat. The juices, milk, fruits & veg, bread, cereals, honey, pasta, rice – they all have it. Sweets definitely have it. Even just one tiny grape will begin the demineralisation which will last the next 30-45 minutes before the saliva has neutralised the acids.

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Teeth can take up to 5-6 of these acid attacks per day without getting decay. So if your eating habits include more than 5-6 meals/snacks/drinks with carbohydrates, you have a higher risk of getting decay. How fast the decaying is depends on your oral hygiene habits (plus some other factors like buffer capacity of the saliva but these details will only confuse you so let’s stick to the basics).

The worst you can do to your teeth is to snack every half an hour because this means the pH level that dropped when you began your session of snacking will never raise above the safe level of 5,5. So in the worst case scenario you might take e.g. cookie/fruit every half an hour from midday till you leave work around five to get you through the day. This means that you had a massive 5-hour-long acid attack in your mouth. If this happens often, it will definitely lead to decaying.

Sugar-Free Does Not Always Mean Tooth-Friendly

Soft drinks contain massive amounts of sugar. A 16 oz bottle of coke can have 13 sugar cubes (4g cubes). This is one reason some people switch to sugar-free soft drinks. Often people do not realise that the drinks that are better for the waist-line are still as harmful to teeth as regular soft drinks. The reason for this is the pH of the drink.

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The lower the pH the more harmful it is to teeth. The low pH does not cause decay as such but it causes dental erosion which is as damaging as decaying is. Erosion on teeth means the surface of the tooth is loosing minerals as a result of an acidic drink making the enamel thinner. Here is the most important sentence to memorise:

The enamel does not grow back!

So it is very important to prevent any loss of tooth structure before you are in trouble with sensitive teeth, colour change of the teeth to yellow (thinning enamel allows the yellow dentin under it to show through), decaying (thin enamel decays quicker) and possibly imbalanced bite due to the loss of tooth structure. These problems caused by enamel erosion are very difficult and expensive to treat.

Do not think these things are not happening in your mouth. They are. I see it every day with more and more patients. Remember that the acidic drinks are not recommended to be consumed daily and when you do, consume them with a meal and drink tap water after you have finished eating and drinking. This will neutralise some of the acids.

Here are a couple of examples of the drink’s pH value:

  • cola drinks from 2,32 (Pepsi Max 2.74)
  • lemon juice 2,25
  • 7up 3,24
  • Ocean Spray Cranberry 2,56
  • strawberry Dasani 3
  • pure water 6-8
  • Red Bull 3,3
  • Full Throttle 1,45

Remember that the plain sparkling water’s pH is around 5. But if you add flavour to it with your soda maker the pH will drop close to 3 or even below it. So it is always better to choose the plain sparkling water than the flavoured one but it is worth noting that there is still a debate amongst us dental professionals whether the plain sparkling water is harmful to the enamel.

If you want to find out more about the pH value of the drinks, click here. And here is an article worth reading: The Washington Post: Why flavoured waters are bad for you teeth.

Vegan Diet and Erosion

Vegan diet in a nutshell means that the diet is devoid of all animal products, including meat, eggs and dairy. The vegans who base their diet on fruits and vegetables are at higher risk of developing dental erosion. The culprit for this is the acidity of the diet and lack of calcium in diet.

Patient Case

50-year-old lady came in to see me for the first time. She had been on a vegan diet for almost all her life. She started the day with a lukewarm water with a splash of lemon followed by a smoothie after which she brushed her teeth with a non-fluoride toothpaste. During the day she followed her vegan diet, drank herbal teas between the meals. In the evening she brushed her teeth again with a non-fluoride toothpaste.

The clinical findings:
The enamel of every single teeth was riddled with severe erosion. The fillings she had were protruding from the tooth as the tooth structure itself had dissolved around them. She had suffered from sensitive teeth and could not eat or drink anything too cold. The enamel of her front teeth were so thin that the colour of the teeth was yellow from the dentin showing through. The front teeth looked like the gremlin’s teeth due to chipping of the thinned enamel. She would need extensive rehabilitation of the occlusion and the aesthetics with crowns and fillings. Needless to say that the treatment would cost a small fortune.

What was the downfall of her teeth? Well, many factors contributed to this severe dental erosion:

  1. The combination of acidic diet and lack of calcium-containing products in the diet. It is advisable to combine acidic food with a dairy product. For example by adding natural yoghurt to your smoothie.
  2. The breakfast should include something you chew. Your saliva flow has dramatically decreased over night and it is chewing that will make the saliva flow again. If you drink something acidic when the mouth is dry (in this patient’s case lemon water and non-dairy smoothie) there is no saliva to protect the teeth. It is the saliva that neutralises acids and restores the minerals back to the enamel.
  3. Non-Fluoride toothpaste. Fluoride will work like calcium on the enamel. It will form even a stronger layer on the surface of the tooth than calcium and other minerals found on enamel. So when using only non-fluoride toothpaste, you are relying on your saliva to do the remineralisation. But like with this patient it simply was not enough to protect the teeth.
  4. Unawareness. Not knowing how our diet affects your teeth is the downfall of many. This patient had acidic vegan diet plus drinks that are highly acidic like water with lemon and the herbal teas.

Other Harmful Diets

There are new fashionable diets popping up all the time and I might not know all of them. But to name a few:

  • Juicing – everything is in a form of a juice. The problem with teeth: no chewing means no saliva to protect your teeth! No dairy-products.
  • Smoothie diet. The problem with teeth: no chewing or no dairy-products.
  • Alkaline diet. No this is a bugger considering teeth. They have their own pH chart for the foods that can mislead people into thinking that some foods are absolutely safe to eat as often as desired. Their pH chart tells what the pH of certain food is when you digest it. Let’s take lemon as an example. In alkaline diet’s pH chart lemon has pH of 10, but when the lemon is entering the mouth, the pH level is 2.0 which is highly acidic and harmful to teeth if teeth are exposed to it often.

How to Protect Your Teeth from Your Diet?

  • If you decide to follow certain trendy diet, find out first how it will affect your teeth. Do not turn to Google if you are not able to tell the difference between fake health news and real, scientifically proven advice. Ask your dentist or hygienist instead.
    These fake health news -sites are very convincing. Even I almost started to believe in the nonsense they were writing when researching for this post. So be alert, trust the dental professionals who have many years of education that is based on science.
  • Think about your current diet. Does it include lots of acidic drinks or foods. You can find out the pH level of many foods and drinks from the internet.
  • Finish your dinner or snack to a slice of cheese. Chew it well. This will neutralise the acids and restore the calcium to the enamel (cheese is rich in calcium).
  • Finish your dinner or snack to a Xylitol. This will neutralise the acids after dinner. Two pastilles sweetened 100% by xylitol five times a day will also decrease a chance of decay. Want to find out more about xylitol, click here.
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  • Use products like GC MI Paste Plus or GC Tooth Mousse to restore the lost calcium in your enamel. The GC Tooth Mousse can be used many times a day as it does not contain fluoride. The best time to use it is just before bedtime by applying pea-size-amount with e.g. cotton stick all over the teeth and leaving it overnight.
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  • Use fluoride toothpaste twice a day and do not rinse your mouth after brushing. Just spit out.
  • Avoid fizzy drinks and juices. Only drink them at mealtimes and try to avoid daily consumption.
  • Avoid snacking. But if you do snack, remember that natural nuts are tooth-friendly snack.
  • Avoid alcohol or drink in moderation. Alcohol is always a risk to your teeth, mouth and general health. It is an acidic drink and the bacteria in your mouth will metabolise the alcohol into acetaldehyde which is carcinogenic in humans.
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Still or Sparkling?

dental-revelations-blog
Is sparkling water harmful to the teeth?

Erosion is a growing problem in dental health and our lifestyle is much to blame. Fizzy and fruity drinks are the biggest culprit but also diets high of sugar and starches. Fashionable and seemingly healthy diets like juicing do play their part as well in dental erosion (I will tell you more about juicing later on this post).

The reason I wanted to bring this subject up is that dental professionals do agree on the fact that fizzy drinks like coke and energy drinks, juices and alcohol are harmful to our teeth. But there seems to be a division amongst us when it comes to the sparkling water.

I have read health news in my country’s largest newspaper where dental professionals state that carbon dioxide in sparkling water is not harmful to the teeth as long as it is plain sparkling water, no flavours or lemon added. In my opinion and in my experience it’s not so black and white situation.

So is sparkling water harmful to our teeth? This is something I hope to find out by bringing this subject into discussion.

What Is Erosion?

To keep it short, the erosion is permanent loss of tooth structure caused by non-bacteria originated acids. These acids come e.g. from our diet, medications or medical conditions like gastric-reflux (heart burn) or bulimia.

The first structure on teeth to take the hit from these acids is the enamel. And when the enamel gets thinner this is what will follow:

  • teeth get more prone to decaying and hypersensitivity
  • the colour of the enamel gets yellower as the bone (dentin) under the enamel is darker in colour and starts to show through the thinning enamel
  • the tips of the teeth start to chip more easily and the tips become transparent and can make the tips look darker in colour as the oral cavity does not have very good lighting and this is what is showing through the thin tip of the tooth
  • the bite will become imbalanced as the tooth structure is eroding away. This might result in jaw joint problems

None of the above you should take lightly and all of them are costly to fix.

Why Do Some People Get Erosion on Teeth and Some Don’t?

Well, there are many variables that play a role in dental erosion. These are:

  • saliva’s buffering capacity – the ability to neutralise the acids. This is different with each person
  • the saliva flow. People with reduced saliva flow (dry mouth sufferers) are more at risk of erosion from acidic drinks. But even with healthy people the saliva flow increases and decreases over 24-hour period
  • the pH of the drink

Remember that the plain water’s pH is somewhere around 7 and it is not harmful to the teeth at any way.

Sparkling Water and Demineralization pH <5,5

Sparkling water has carbon dioxide which will become carbon acid when it comes in contact with our mouths. The pH of the sparkling water varies but normally it is between 4-6 (click here to one bottled water company’s info page that includes the pH of their drinks).

It is rare to find the information on the bottle about the pH of the water and often very cleverly they mention that the pH at the source is 7 which can be misleading.

Us professionals are familiar with the fact that demineralisation happens when the pH in the mouth drops below 5,5. This is a fact. And when knowing this, it is difficult to accept that the sparkling water is not harmful if the pH is as low as 4.

An example.

If the sparkling water has pH of 4,5 and the person keeps the bottle next to him at work and sips away every now and then (and perhaps even swishes it around in the mouth) then surely it is harmful to the teeth?

Another example.

Person is exercising at the gym and has sparkling water as a drink. She is dehydrated from the exercising and the saliva flow is poor due to this (= no saliva or very little saliva to neutralise the acids). She drinks sparkling water and swishes it around the mouth to ease the sense of dryness in the mouth. It must do a damage if this happens in weekly basis.

Please note that this same scenario with any other fizzy or otherwise acidic drink (sport drinks) is even worse situation. Still water (tap) would be the best option.

My Experience

Every once in a while I see a patient whose teeth are hypersensitive. I go through the patient’s diet, oral hygiene habits and medical history. Often the reason for hypersensitivity is snacking and poor oral hygiene (lack of fluoride and build up of plaque) but sometimes there is no other reason than the patient drinking sparkling water between the meals. Devices like SodaStream at home make it possible to carbonate drinks like water at home. Some people use them many times a day.

I once had a patient who had read the same article (mentioned in the beginning of the post) in the newspaper in which dental professionals were saying it is ok to drink sparkling water. This patient had done research on the subject and was already in defensive mode about it. So there was no way for me to convince him otherwise. But then again I am merely a channel of information and it is patient’s right to choose whether to take the information on board or not.

It is easy to make people understand that flavoured sparkling water is very acidic due to the acidity of the flavouring. But many reject the suggestion that plain sparkling water could be damaging to the teeth as well. I don’t blame them as many of us dental professionals do the same.

My experience in the clinical field has proven that it is not all that simple when it comes to erosion and hypersensitivity. What us dental professionals should keep in mind is the whole picture of patients’ oral health. There’s no harm telling patients that it is worth trying to avoid sparkling water for few months to see if it makes a difference to the sensitivity. But remember also give advice on oral hygiene and eating habits.


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