FoodReference.com Logo

Food Articles, News & Features Section

  Home   ][   FOOD ARTICLES   ][   Food Trivia & Facts   ][   Cooking Tips   ][   Recipes   ][   Today in Food History   ][   Food Quotes   ][   Who's Who   ][   Videos   ][   Food Trivia Quizzes   ][   Crosswords   ][   Food Poems   ][   Cookbooks   ][   Food Posters   ][   Free Magazines   ][   Gardening   ][   Gourmet Tours & Schools   ][   Key West   ][   Food Festivals  

You are here 

> Home  > Food Articles  > Nutrition 2: Kitchen Fat to Vitamin  > Tea and Your Teeth

Next

 



POPULAR PAGES

  Food Facts & Trivia
  Recipe Contests
  Food Shows & Festivals
  Recipe Index


 

See also: Healthy Food Choices Videos

Drink Brewed Tea To Avoid Tooth Erosion

 

Low erosive effect on teeth and antioxidants provide health benefits

Today, the average size soft drink is 20 ounces and contains 17 teaspoons of sugar. More startling is that some citric acids found in fruit drinks are more erosive than hydrochloric or sulfuric acid—which is also known as battery acid. These refined sugars and acids found in soda and citrus juice promote tooth erosion, which wears away the hard part of the teeth, or the enamel. Once tooth enamel is lost, it's gone forever. There is a beverage that does not produce such irreversible results. When deciding between the many options available, the best thing to drink is brewed tea, according to a study in the July/August issue of General Dentistry, the clinical, peer-reviewed journal of the Academy of General Dentistry (AGD).

Apart from tasting good, brewed tea has many health benefits. Tea is loaded with natural antioxidants, which are thought to decrease incidence of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes.

Mohamed A. Bassiouny, DMD, BDS, MSc, PhD, the lead author of the study, compared green and black tea to soda and orange juice in terms of their short- and long-term erosive effect on human teeth. The study found that the erosive effect of tea was similar to that of water, which has no erosive effect. And, when comparing green versus black, he discovered that there is a better option among those as well.

Dr. Bassiouny says that "when we look at tea and read about the benefits, it's amazing—not because green tea is 'the in thing'—but because there are advantages." He adds that much research done overseas, in countries such as Japan and Europe, found that green tea was identified to being superior over black due to its natural flavonoids (plant nutrients) and antioxidants.

But, if you do drink tea, experts suggest avoiding additives such as milk, lemon, or sugar because they combine with tea's natural flavonoids and decrease the benefits. In addition, stay away from prepackaged iced teas because they contain citric acid and high amounts of sugars. It does not matter whether the tea is warm or cold—as long as it is home brewed without additives.

Kenton Ross, DMD, FAGD, AGD spokesperson, sees patients' erosion problems on a daily basis in his practice. "Severe cases of erosion occur monthly and are frequently associated with high rates of soft drink consumption," he says. "This study clearly shows that brewed teas resulted in dramatically less enamel loss than soft drinks and acidic juices," says Dr. Ross. "I would highly recommend patients choose tea as an alternative to more erosive drinks like soda and fruit juice."

Tips to decrease erosion:
• Reduce or eliminate carbonated beverages. Instead, drink water, milk, or tea
• Skip the additives such as sugar, lemon, and milk
• Drink acidic drinks quickly and through a straw
• Chew sugar-free gum to increase saliva flow in your mouth
• Rinse with water to neutralize the acids, and wait an hour before brushing

November 25, 2008 - Academy of General Dentistry
The AGD is a professional association of more than 35,000 general dentists dedicated to staying up-to-date in the profession through continuing education. Founded in 1952, the AGD has grown to become the world's second largest dental association, which is the only association that exclusively represents the needs and interests of general dentists.
 

TOP

 

RELATED ARTICLES:

  Is Your Kitchen Making You Fat?   ][   Low Carb Diets   ][   Mediterranean Diet & Tomatoes   ][   National Nutrition Month   ][   Obesity and the Blame Game   ][   Olive Oil & Molecular Biology   ][   Omega-3 Fatty Acids & Seafood   ][   Orange Juice: Tastes Like Fresh   ][   Pet Food Nutrition   ][   Phytochemicals   ][   Pistachios, Health Benefits   ][   Pizza: Cancer Fighting Food   ][   Potatoes & Phytochemicals   ][   Power of Food   ][   Raw Food: Healthier than Cooked?   ][   Raw Food Diets   ][   Salmon Debacle   ][   Salt: Reducing Consumption   ][   Seven 'Super Spices'   ][   Sour Taste Control   ][   Soyfoods and Salads   ][   Sunflower Seed Butter   ][   Superfoods   ][   Sweet Potato Nutrition   ][   Tea and Your Teeth   ][   Toilet Paper: Virgin or Recycled   ][   Tooth Decay and Grapes   ][   That's What They Say   ][   Transfat Acid Containing Foods   ][   Upgrading Family Meals   ][   Variety is the Spice of Life   ][   Vitamin D Reduces Falls   ][   Vitamin D and Alzheimer's  


  About Us & Contact   ][   Chef James Bio   ][   Website Bibliography   ][   Food Timeline   ][   Food Links  

Please feel free to link to any pages of FoodReference.com from your website.

For permission to use any of this content please E-mail: james@foodreference.com

All contents are copyright © 1990 - 2012 James T. Ehler and www.FoodReference.com unless otherwise noted.
All rights reserved.

You may copy and use portions of this website for non-commercial, personal use only.

Any other use of these materials without prior written authorization is not very nice and violates the copyright.
Please take the time to request permission.
 





Search FoodReference.com

 



Free Food Magazine Subscriptions

 



 



Search Locally
What:  
Where:
Browse by State
• All Local Guides
• Alabama
• Alaska
• Arizona
• Arkansas
• California
• Colorado
• Connecticut
• DC
• Delaware
• Florida
• Georgia
• Hawaii
• Idaho
• Illinois
• Indiana
• Iowa
• Kansas
• Kentucky
• Louisiana
• Maine
• Maryland
• Massachusetts
• Michigan
• Minnesota
• Mississippi
• Missouri
• Montana
• Nebraska
• Nevada
• New Hampshire
• New Jersey
• New Mexico
• New York
• North Carolina
• North Dakota
• Ohio
• Oklahoma
• Oregon
• Pennsylvania
• Rhode Island
• South Carolina
• South Dakota
• Tennessee
• Texas
• Utah
• Vermont
• Virginia
• Washington
• West Virginia
• Wisconsin
• Wyoming