Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Snacking On Fruits Can Cause Dental Problems

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Jan, 2015 01:04 PM
  • Snacking On Fruits Can Cause Dental Problems
An apple a day may keep the doctor away, but it could also be keeping your dentist busy, according to a recent survey of oral hygiene experts.
 
The warning about snacking on sugary fruit comes from a poll of 458 dentists, hygienists and dental professionals. 
 
Four out of five professionals warned that snacking on fruits contributes to decay, plaque build-up and enamel erosion, and a third said that apples can cause major damage to teeth and gums, alongside chocolate and biscuits, reports femalefirst.co.uk.
 
The findings echo research by Professor David Bartlett at the King's Dental Institute, which found eating fruit may be as damaging to dental health as carbonated drinks. 
 
Just under half of the experts questioned in the poll warned that fruit juice is also a key cause of tooth and gum problems and more than a third pinpointed savoury snacks such as crisps as problematic too.
 
"We may be keeping our teeth longer, but there are still gaping holes in many people's dental health regimes,” said Robin Seymour, Emeritus Professor of Dental Sciences at Newcastle University and leading periodontologist.
 
"A 2009 national survey of adult dental health found that 23 percent of adults brush their teeth only once a day and, despite the popularity of more efficient powered toothbrushes, many of those who brushed twice a day still had visible deposits of plaque, which cause dental decay and gum disease,” added Seymour.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

How to make kids eat healthy food in school

How to make kids eat healthy food in school
Along with the menu, improving the environment of the school cafeteria is important to ensure intake of healthy food by children, says a new research....

How to make kids eat healthy food in school

Home cooked food, the ideal recipe for healthy diet

Home cooked food, the ideal recipe for healthy diet
Those who frequently cooked at home -- six-to-seven nights a week -- also consumed fewer calories on the occasions when they ate out, the findings showed....

Home cooked food, the ideal recipe for healthy diet

Emotional stress affects young women's heart more

Emotional stress affects young women's heart more
Young women with heart diseases are more likely than men to have reduced blood flow to their heart if they are under emotional stress, says a new research....

Emotional stress affects young women's heart more

Travelling with a smoker increases cancer risk

Travelling with a smoker increases cancer risk
While simply sitting in cars with people who smoke, non-smokers breathe in a host of potentially dangerous compounds that are associated with cancer, heart disease...

Travelling with a smoker increases cancer risk

Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay

Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay
Regular, moderate consumption of filtered, decaffeinated coffee may decrease an individual's risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, promising research indicates....

Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay

Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime

Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime
A Croatian biologist has developed an app for smartphones that is able to follow up on the user's physical fitness by taking "selfie" photos on a daily basis....

Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime