Archive for February 23rd, 2010

Your Key to Dealing With Tough Economic Times and Expensive Heath Care Bills…

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

You may not be very surprised to learn that times are tough right now for many people throughout the country.  You hear that the official unemployment rate is about 10% but secretly, many people say it is much higher.

However, this article isn’t really about doom and gloom.  In fact, I want to believe that things are going to get better, just like you most likely do.

Health is very important to us. And when times get tough, people get stressed. Sometimes this takes a toll on your health.

It is no secret that many researchers have discovered evidence that suggests the health of our bodies are very connected to the health of our mouths. Yet people have problems with this in many regards!

One is the cost of dental treatment. The other is a lack of understanding, about how to improve dental health at home. These two factors are very related. If you understand good home care, you have a much better chance to keep your teeth and gums healthy AND avoiding expensive dental bills at the same time.

Here are some tools that can help.

1. The hydrofloss -  Oral irrigation can be very helpful to your dental health – however this particular

device is, in my opinion the best. It has been studied and the studies have been published in the Journal of Clinical Periodontology not once, but twice!

2. Therabreath moutwash – pH balanced, oxygenated mouthwash – very powerful for combatting bad breath and even gum disease.

Taking care of your dental health often needs to extend beyond just regular toothbrushing and flossing. After all, if they were enough to truly maintain your dental health, then why are so many people walking around that need or have had expensive dental treatments?  In time, you will begin to understand that what you do at home can have a major impact on your health, well-being and your wallet – all at the same time!

Get more information on this topic from the book: What You Should Know about Gum Disease – available at Amazon and other online book sellers.

*This article is for information purposes only and does not intend to provide advice, diagnosis or treatment for any health problem. If you have or think you might have a health problem of any kind, visit your doctor or dentist for advice, diagnosis and treatment.  The USFDA has not evaluated statements about any products mentioned in this article.  
 

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The Importance Of Regular Dental Treatment

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Get The Best Value Dental Treatment

Our teeth are lifelong partners of ours, especially if we love to eat. Having only two sets in our lifetimes, first are the milk teeth while the second and last are our permanent teeth, it is therefore important to be able to take of them as best as we could. Otherwise, a life of dentures awaits.

Living with dentures is not a good thing. Imagine having to take out your teeth every night before going to bed, then having to put them on in the morning. Now, sometimes we forget our keys at home and so it’s not far from us to forget our teeth just before leaving the house. Imagine the flushness of our faces then when we attempt to smile. A toothless grin worthy of a mendicant down at the subway. Then there are the denture pastes that keeps dentures in place, that’s an added purchase and hassle as well as the cleaning solutions. Lest we forget too those socially awkward situations where our dentures might get loose and fall down in the middle of a formal dinner. Now, are you ready to tackle all these things?

Having regular dental treatment is very important if we want to keep our pearly whites. Of course just as important is our daily oral hygiene. Brushing three times a day, flossing everyday, gargling and eating healthy food

are all important. However, these acts of taking care of our teeth are not enough. Pretty soon, plaque and tartar build up will occur no matter how diligent we are with our brushing and flossing. When these problems arise, the time to get dental treatment has arrived.

Bi-annual cleanings of our teeth by our dentists is recommended. Called prophylaxis, this detailed cleaning makes sure that the accumulated plaque and tartar build ups are removed leaving us with clean, sparkling and healthy teeth and gums. Though one might argue that we can remove these build ups ourselves, those who think that, I ask you, have you ever tried to remove tartar from your teeth?

Tartar on our teeth are like barnacles on a ship. Pretty crusty and very hard to remove. If one would attempt to remove it himself with a special tool, he or she may succeed however, the risk of removing the enamel of your teeth is there. And if the enamel is stripped off, our teeth become as vulnerable as a wet kitten in the middle of a busy highway. That is to say, it can be saved, but only if someone acts fast.

So if you love your teeth, and you love yourself, go and take care of your teeth with regular dental treatment combined with good daily oral hygiene practices. Teeth are an extension of ourselves. They are part of us. And we need them though we don’t appreciate it till we lose them.

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Consider That Gingivitis is Just the Beginning Stage of Problems and Can Be Corrected…

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

The state of our own personal dental health is something that many people just do not have time to think about and that is certainly understandable. On the surface, it does indeed seem that there are more important things to concentrate on. Saving disaster victims, ending world famine, and stopping human rights violations like the persecution of the peaceful Falun Gong meditators in China are all very worthy and important ways to spend our time.

I know that there is not anything glamorous about taking care of our teeth and gums. Yet, it is truly vitally important to each of us as individuals. Does it get in the way? You bet it does. However, we all need to take the time to focus on this truly necessary aspect of our lives because saving our own teeth and health has very high intrinsic value.

Let’s not even talk about the heavy and perhaps unreasonable expense of costly dental treatments. Instead, let us focus on something a little more practical sounding. Researchers are finding connections between gum disease otherwise known as periodontal disease and all kinds of illnesses.

Recently, I heard the claim that there is a connection between dental disease and pancreatic cancer! The link between diabetes, heart disease, stroke, pre-term babies as well as other illnesses have all been at least suspected of being related in some way to gum disease.

"But I do not have gum disease !", you may protest. Actually, the odds are not in your favor that you do not have it. In fact, dental professionals will tell you that perhaps as many as 75% of the American population has some form of this problem. That is more people than do not have it.

Typically, this problem progresses in an almost invisible way to the victim. Your dentist or hygienist may mention to you on several occasions that you are starting to have a problem. Like most people, you may not pay much attention. After all, everything seems fine!

One day you may be informed that you need a deep cleaning or a SRP (Scaling and Root Planing Treatment) and

that you have a moderate level of gum disease. You think you went from zero to sixty in a few seconds, but the reality is that you had a gingivitis problem a while back, but now it has increased in severity.

To be fair, it may not have happened this way to you. Dentists are not always focused on the health of your gums, preferring to simply work on your teeth. Therefore, it is possible that the problem grew and you knew nothing about it!

For this reason, a good periodontist can be your friend. This is the focus of their practice. They can always refer you to a good general dentist if they see a problem with your teeth. This is what I prefer. I go to a periodontist and use him as my primary care dentist even if he doesn’t know it!

Anyway, the point is that gum disease is rather serious, you cannot afford (literally) to bury your head in the sand. You could end up spending thousands upon thousands for treatments and a final solution that is nowhere near as good as your own original teeth.

The good news is that what you do at home is far more important than what your dentist and hygienist do for you in the office. They cannot be with you every day and you may only see them for a couple to a few times per year. You can ask them yourself. They will tell you that YOU and what you do at home will have the greatest impact on your dental health.

Learn what the secrets to good home care are!

Learn about the one tool that I think is most important for home care at http://www.HowToFightGumDisease.com

David is the author of the book: What You Should Know about Gum Disease – available at all online booksellers. ISBN: 978-0981485508

*article is for information only and does not seek to render advice, diagnosis and treatment. If you have or think you might have any health problem, contact your doctor for advice, diagnosis and treatment. USFDA has not evaluated statements about any products in this article.

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Waterpik WP-100 Dental Water Jet Review

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

The Waterpik WP-100 Ultra Dental Water Jet is clinically proved to be more effective than floss for healthier gums. Most dental professionals urge brushing and flossing to retain your dentition and gums their healthiest. Regrettably, most 80-percent of Americans don’t floss on a normal basis, and most people find flossing to be a painful or unpleasant chore. Finally, there is an active alternative to flossing that feels great and is simple to complete.

The Waterpik Ultra functions way beyond flossing to keep your gums their healthiest. Waterpik has designed the Waterpik WP-100 to deliver a water pressing of 10 to 90 PSI with 1200 pulses per minute. This system delivers a clinically evidenced combination of water pressure level and pulsation to remove debris and bacteria lodged deep between teeth and below the gum-line — three times deeper than brushing alone. In addition, it massages and stimulates the gums to improve circulation and help promote strong and healthy gums. The Waterpik Ultra is so working that it is clinically tested to be up to 93-percent more operational than flossing at reducing gum bleeding

Here are customer reviews about Waterpik Ultra Dental Water Jet:

I’ve always prided myself on my good teeth. I intended that flossing and brushing was sufficiency…that was until I went to the dental practitioner, and he stated I had the rootage of periodontal disease. That dismayed the hell out of me.
I went home and started using the Sonicare I had bought but never plugged in. That was good, but not enough – I bought a Waterpik because obviously flossing wasn’t cutting it.
I had never used a Waterpik before, and it was some divine revelation! I’m still goggle-eyed that there are some Waterpik oldtimers who say this machine isn’t hard enough…uh, for what? Skinning paint off a brick wall? This thing perfectly bumped my socks off

when it got to the pressure sensation.

I started out at 2 and worked my way up to 7 – it still stings like mad, but I’m getting used to it by now. I put Listerine in the tank to increase the anti-bacteria result.
My dentist went on vacation, and I had to cancel another appointment, so it happened that almost two months had elapsed since the last time I had seen him. In that time, I reliably brushed with the Sonicare four times a day and used the Waterpik at least once (several tankfuls of water and Listerine worth.)

Regarding the leaking people talk about – the only time the tank leaks, I notice, is if I put my fingers on the seal when I’m refilling it. If I’m careful to keep my fingers away from that seal, the tank is water tight. So when I come back for my check-up, the dentist was Openmouthed. He wasn’t sure what I had done, but he said my gums looked pink and healthy! He had said initially I’d have to get my teeth cleaned every three months because I must be one of those people who gets a tartar build up quicker than other people…well, I had worked religiously on scaling back the plaque. (I had also buy a dental mirror so I could discover the back of my front teeth for telltale plaque residual.)

Hmmm, no comment about that plaque…was it because there WASN’T any? My dental practitioner inquired me if I had been eating up because there was so compact build up (I had to pull that out of him because I KNEW he didn’t want to give me credit for making that hard on my dental hygiene!)
The dentist HADN’T recommended a Waterpik, but I knew I had to go to the extreme to beat back the periodontal enemy. My dentitions are so clear, they squeaker!

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