close up of older woman's smile

How Our Mouths Change with Age

Everyday wear and tear takes a toll on your teeth as you age. But there are many things you can do to keep your aging teeth in great condition. Follow these tips and you will have a lot to smile about.

Cut Down Wear and Tear

Your teeth are unbelievably strong. However, they can still be worn down. All of the chewing, grinding, and biting wears away the enamel, which is the hard, outer layer of your teeth.

You will not be able to erase a lifetime of wear and tear, without having it restored by a dentist, but you can definitely keep it from getting worse. Don’t chew on ice or other hard foods. Chewing on hard foods can cause chips in your enamel and even break teeth.

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The Different Types of Teeth and What They Do

 
People have two sets of teeth. They are the primary teeth and then permanent teeth, which develop in stages after you baby teeth fall out. Adults have about 32 permanent teeth, which include wisdom teeth. Although types of teeth are often taken for granted, they are very important. Teeth help us chew our food which allows us to digest all of the nutrients used to nourish our bodies daily. Although very similar, each tooth has a different shape and a different job to do. Our teeth play an important role in our daily lives. Here are all of the different types of teeth and all of the jobs that they perform.

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What Does Correct Oral Health Look Like?

Clean and strong teeth begin with the best oral hygiene routine, as the look and feel of your pearly whites depends solely on the various techniques used to care of them. What results from outstanding habits is usually a mouth that looks and smells healthy, is full of clean and debris-free teeth, and contains vibrantly pink gums that do not bleed.

Because oral health is vitally important to your overall well-being, keeping the best oral hygiene routine will not only enable you to look and feel great, but make it possible to eat and speak properly as well. Practicing daily preventive care, including proper brushing and flossing, helps stop problems before they develop. It is also much less painful, expensive, and worrisome than treating certain conditions that may have otherwise been prevented but instead progressed over time.

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Brown haired Woman smiling, holding hair back from face

Boosting Your Smile with Cosmetic Gum Sculpting

Attaining an ever so beautiful smile is vitally important not just for aesthetic purposes, but also on a very personal level, helping raise self-esteem and improve confidence. Some unlucky few, however, are born with uneven gums that rest too low or too high on the teeth, causing them difficulty to develop enough confidence to bravely shine those pearly whites as they otherwise could. Cosmetic gum surgery changes that.

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