by Andrea Harris
Call me Beauregarde. Violet Beauregarde.
I love gum. I love it so much that when people ask what I’d HAVE to have if I were stranded on a desert island, I secretly wish I could say gum. But you get funny looks if you don’t pick things like food... or water... Nevertheless, I gotta have my gum. I snuck it in every choir class... and concert in high school and college. (Shhhh … don’t tell.) I’m so stealthy with my gum that I can pretty much keep a piece in my mouth while I eat dinner and have it to chew later. Crazy, I know. Every once in awhile though, I wonder if all this gum chewing is really all that good for me. I have perpetually minty fresh breath, but is that a good enough reason to chew?
As luck would have it, the ADA actually approves of my gum habit! They claim, “clinical studies have shown that chewing sugarless gum for 20 minutes following meals can help prevent tooth decay.
The chewing of sugarless gum increases the flow of saliva, which washes away food and other debris, neutralizes acids produced by bacteria in the mouth and provides disease-fighting substances throughout the mouth. Increased saliva flow also carries with it more calcium and phosphate to help strengthen tooth enamel.”
HALLELUJAH.
So what does that mean for me and all the other happy gum cracking folks? It means that you can decrease the amount of tooth decay by limiting the acid you your teeth come into contact with. After you eat, the pH of your dental plaque becomes acidic for a period of time, weakening teeth and making them susceptible to tooth decay.
Colgate cites a two-year sugarless chewing gum study conducted on a population of children from third to fifth grade in Europe. Along with non-fluoridated water and regular fluoride toothpaste use, the results after just one year showed children that chewed sugarless sorbitol gum had a 41.7 percent reduction in dental caries compared to the control group of children who did not chew the sorbitol gum. The study also showed that chewing three pieces of sugarless chewing gum per day was not difficult to maintain. Trust me, it’s not. I’m more of a six to ten piece a day kinda girl myself. Three pieces a day would list emergency rationing for me!
Naturally, the ADA suggests that while gum chewing does help cut does on dental decay, it should never replace regular brushing and flossing. Still, I take great comfort in knowing I can have my gum and chew it, too.
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