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Special Content
Sugar in the diet
Over the last 30 years our national diet has changed dramatically to include many
more processed foods, snacks and soft drinks. Many of these contain a high
proportion of sugars, salt and fat. The more we snack the more we need to be careful
of what we eat and how best to protect our teeth.
Sugar and decay
Plaque is a soft, sticky bacterial deposit that forms on the surface of the teeth. When you eat
foods containing sugars, the bacteria in the plaque feed on the sugar to produce plaque acids
which attack the enamel of the tooth surface, causing decay (caries). The more often you eat
or drink products that contain sugars, means the more acid attacks your teeth could suffer.
The sugars that cause most dental decay are those which are added to food and drinks during
manufacture, processing or food preparation. They are found in confectionery, soft drinks, cakes,
biscuits, table sugar and a range of snacks and ready foods. Sugars that are naturally present
in foods such as milk, fruit and vegetables are not an important cause of decay.
| Reducing the damage |
- The most important measure is to reduce the frequency of sugar intake. Cut down on sugar-containing drinks and foods, particularly between meals
- Snack instead on crisp vegetables, fruit, cheese, bread and unsweetened yoghurt
- Milk and water are good choices for drinks
- Restrict eating sugar-containing foods and drinks to mealtimes, when saliva production is high and can neutralise plaque acids
- Some sweets are more harmful than others. If you must eat sweet things, keep them for a special treat, and eat all in one go rather than nibbling all through the day
- Get label-aware. Check for sugars in prepared foods and avoid them between meals
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Sugary drinks
Children’s teeth are particularly prone to damage from sugars, and they should be given sugarfree
drinks whenever possible. Check labels carefully to find out whether foods and drinks contain
sugars*. Never leave a child to drink a sweetened drink from a bottle, especially at bedtime or
as a comforter. Fruit juices contain sugars and should be diluted, one part juice to ten parts
water for younger children. Always serve in a cup at mealtimes.
Orbit Sugarfree gum
Chewing Orbit sugarfree gum increases the flow of saliva during and after
chewing, which neutralises the plaque acids generated by the sugar. For
best effect, chew after meals and snacks for 20 minutes.
Sugars in medicines
Sugars have been included in some medicines to make them
more palatable, but these can also cause decay. Most children’s
medicines and cough/sore throat sweets now have sugarfree
alternatives: Ask the doctor or pharmacist for these.
| *Sugars to watch out for on food labels |
| – they can all damage a child’s teeth:
glucose, glucose syrup, fructose, concentrated fruit juice, sucrose,
dextrose, honey, invert sugar, maltose, hydrolysed starch. |
For more information on this and many other dental topics, please visit betteroralhealth.info.
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