Important Reasons for Mouth Guards
Important Reasons for Mouth Guards
A mouth guard is a soft plastic or laminate device used in sports to prevent oral injuries to the teeth, mouth, cheeks, tongue and jaw. The American Dental Association projects that one third of all dental injuries are sports related.1 The use of a mouth guard can prevent more than 200,000 oral injuries to the mouth each year.
The types of dental injuries that can occur without the use of a mouth guard are chipped or broken teeth, fractured crowns or bridgework, Read more...
Cracked Tooth Syndrome
What Is It?
Unlike teeth with obvious fractures, teeth with cracked tooth syndrome usually have fractures that are too small to be seen on X-rays. Sometimes the fracture is below the gum line, making it even more difficult to identify.
Cracked tooth syndrome more often occurs in molars, usually lower molars, which absorb most of the forces of chewing.
People who grind or clench their teeth may be more susceptible to cracked tooth syndrome because of the constant forces put on their teeth. Read more...
Cheilosis/Cheilitis
What Is It?
Cheilosis (also called cheilitis) is a painful inflammation and cracking of the corners of the mouth. It sometimes occurs on only one side of the mouth, but usually involves both sides. This disorder occurs most frequently in people with ill-fitting dentures that fail to adequately separate the upper and lower jaws. People with habits that irritate the corners of the mouth, like licking or rubbing those areas, also are more likely to develop cheilosis. Moisture gathers in skin folds Read more...
Canker Sores
What Is It?
This disease causes painful, round ulcers to develop on the linings of the cheeks and lips, the tongue or the base of the gums. The tendency to develop these ulcers is inherited. Ulcers also can be associated with other diseases, particularly connective tissue diseases such as lupus or Behçet's syndrome, which cause symptoms on the eyes and genitals as well as the mouth. There can be one or many ulcers at the same time, and they are recurrent, which means they keep returning. Multiple Read more...
Can Medication Have an Effect on My Oral Health?
Can Medication Have an Effect on My Oral Health?
Yes, medications can have oral side effects — dry mouth being the most common. Be sure to tell your dentist about any medications that you're taking, even medicines that you purchase without a prescription.
These are the types of medications that will often produce dry mouth:
Antihistamines
Decongestants
Pain Killers
Diuretics
High Blood Pressure Medications
Antidepressants
Other medications may cause abnormal bleeding when brushing Read more...
Bruxism – Teeth Grinding
What Is It?
Bruxism is clenching or grinding your teeth, often without being aware that your are doing it. In the United States, bruxism affects an estimated 30 to 40 million children and adults.
Some people grind their teeth only during sleep; this condition is called "nocturnal bruxism" or "sleep-related bruxism." Others grind their teeth during the daytime as well, most often during situations that make them feel tense or anxious. People with severe bruxism can fracture dental fillings or Read more...
A Closer Look at Cavities
Follow the development of a cavity and learn how minor changes to your daily routine can help protect your smile.
For more information, please call Dr. Jeffrey Fester in Roswell, GA, 770.587.4202 to schedule a free consultation.
How to Care for Children’s Teeth
How to Care for Children’s Teeth
This short video teaches you the correct way to brush children’s teeth giving them a healthy start toward a lifetime of good oral health.
For more information, please call Dr. Jeffrey Fester in Roswell, GA, 770.587.4202 to schedule a free consultation.
Implants: The Modern Solution for Missing Teeth
Dental implants are increasingly valuable tools in modern dentistry. Although they have been available for more than a quarter of a century, only in the last decade has technology advanced so that implants can be considered the optimal solution for missing teeth. Instead of endless rounds of heroic attempts to save a failing tooth, it is increasingly simpler, less invasive, and more cost-effective to replace the failing tooth with a dental implant.
If relatively little tooth structure remains Read more...
Watch what you eat after teeth-whitening
Eating certain foods and avoiding others can help keep your teeth white after you've used an at-home whitening kit or had cosmetic bleaching, an expert says.
People should avoid or limit consumption of foods and other products that stain teeth, such as tobacco, soy sauce, soft drinks, red and white wine and blueberries.
"For many individuals who have had good results with either dentist-directed or over-the-counter whitening techniques, a significant concern is how to keep the teeth Read more...