Energy drinks can cause irreversible damage to teeth
By ANI | ANI
From
Washington, May 2 (ANI): Consumption of sports and energy drinks, which is
increasing especially among adolescents, is causing irreversible damage to
teeth-specifically, the high acidity levels in the drinks erode tooth enamel,
the glossy outer layer of the tooth- say researchers including one of an Indian
origin.
And
energy drinks are twice as likely to destroy enamel than sports drinks.
"Young
adults consume these drinks assuming that they will improve their sports
performance and energy levels and that they are 'better' for them than
soda," said Poonam Jain, BDS, MS, MPH, lead author of the study.
"Most
of these patients are shocked to learn that these drinks are essentially
bathing their teeth with acid,"
she noted.
Researchers
examined the acidity levels in 13 sports drinks and nine energy drinks. They
found that the acidity levels could vary between brands of beverages and
flavours of the same brand.
To test
the effect of the acidity levels, the researchers immersed samples of human
tooth enamel in each beverage for 15 minutes, followed by immersion in
artificial saliva for two hours. This cycle was repeated four times a day for
five days, and the samples were stored in fresh artificial saliva at all
other
times.
"This
type of testing simulates the same exposure that a large proportion of American
teens and young adults are subjecting their teeth to on a regular basis when
they drink one of these beverages every few hours," said Dr. Jain.
The
researchers found that damage to enamel was evident after only five days of
exposure to sports or energy drinks, although energy drinks showed a
significantly greater potential to damage teeth than sports drinks. In fact,
the researchers found that energy drinks caused twice as much damage to teeth
as sports drinks.
Damage
caused to tooth enamel is irreversible, and without the protection of enamel,
teeth become overly sensitive, prone to cavities, and more likely to decay.
"Teens
regularly come into my office with these types of symptoms, but they don't know
why," says AGD spokesperson Jennifer Bone, DDS, MAGD. "We review
their diet and snacking habits and then we discuss their consumption of these
beverages. They don't realize that something as seemingly harmless as a sports
or energy drink can do a lot of damage to their teeth."
Dr. Bone
recommends that her patients minimize their intake of sports and energy drinks.
She also advises them to chew sugar-free gum or rinse the mouth with water
following consumption of the drinks.
"Both
tactics increase saliva flow, which naturally helps to return the acidity
levels in the mouth to normal," she stated.
Also,
patients should wait at least an hour to brush their teeth after consuming
sports and energy drinks. Otherwise, said Dr. Bone, they will be spreading acid
onto the tooth surfaces, increasing the erosive action.
The
study was published in the May/June 2012 issue of General Dentistry, the
peer-reviewed clinical journal of the Academy of General Dentistry. (ANI)
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