Spyke
lemmy.world

You know how they seal kids teeth, and insurance covers it? It basically keeps kids from getting cavities until the sealant eventually wears off. Well, they could put the same sealant on adults. But they don’t.

98

I've lived in at least two places where that treatment is available for adults. Insurance may cover it depending on what kind of insurance you got, it is expensive but not ridiculously so in comparison to other dental procedures.

29
lemmy.world

I had it done in the USA in the 90s when I had my adult teeth, not sure if it was before or after I got my 12 year molars. I asked about it a few years ago and the dentist said that insurance only covers it for kids.

15
feddit.ch

What do they use for sealing? I'm swiss and we don't do this. Is it because you have corn sirup everywhere?

edit: so, uh, is this widespread?

6

I have no idea. It’s white and it cures hard with exposure to UV light. It might just be filling media used as a surface sealant—not a dentist, sorry.

6

I don't know enough on this to comment. Before today, I admittedly didn't consider that countries like Switzerland didn't use them...

2
Alytasticreply
lemmy.one

Almost all children in USA get sealants as a preventative measure, in my experience.

1
lemmy.world

Yes. It covers the top of the teeth kids still need to brush really well because you can easily get cavities in between your teeth, etc..

12
robbotlovereply
lemmy.world

is that the mouthgaurd filled with flavored goo that you have to keep in your mouth for 29 minutes while you drool all over yourself?

9
lemmy.world

And you're basically supposed to do the same thing twice a day with your toothpaste, which is why the tube says "spit out after brushing" and not "make a little cup with your hand and use it to swish some water from the sink around in your mouth, rinsing most of the fluoride off before it has a chance to work".

10
blueboobyreply
lemmy.world

My wife works in dental insurance so I asked her. She said for the general public, the effectiveness of the sealant decreases as the client ages, because an adult's tooth is more smooth than a child's. So there's a critical age where the cons outweighs the pros.

17
lemmy.world

If you think that the entire dental industry is fully prepared and willing to negate billions of dollars in profit per year but the porosity of adult teeth has simply tied their hands... I've got a couple bridges to sell you.

-4

I am 38 and have so far had no cavity. Turns out adults have a very easy handle on dental hygiene, brushing your teeth, flossing and avoiding candy and sweet drinks

1
Kanzarreply
sh.itjust.works

It's useful in immature teeth because the grooves have not yet taken up enough fluoride to be acid resistant enough against the modern diet. Not all immature teeth need them either, as not everyone has those deep grooves. Furthermore, this only protects against decay on that surface if it's done well - and a lot of the time a wriggly kid means saliva has contaminated the surface and now you have an extra interface of failure.

In adults the benefit is a lot less (if the groove was decay prone, they would have formed a cavity there by the time they see a dentist), and doing this procedure may actually increase the risk of decay than reduce (due to the extra interface of failure).

Lastly, this only protects that surface - not in between teeth. A lot of cavities happen between because there's a lot of plaque being left behind there... Because almost nobody flosses properly.

Use your interdental brushes folks! And stop drinking soda... And use extra high fluoride toothpaste.

10
lemmy.world

Does fluoride do anything for adults? I had a retired MD-credentialed public health director recently tell me that it only is useful for the first (7? Can’t remember) years of life.

2
Kanzarreply
sh.itjust.works

Mineral constantly comes in and out of the enamel crystal matrix due to acid challenge (which occurs for a variety of reasons), and including fluoride when it goes back in creates a more acid resistant crystal.

This occurs no matter the age of the individual. Systemic uptake is something to be mindful of at young ages, so it's actually important to have not too much when younger, but you can go up to an adult dose past the age of 7.

6

That’s what I had always heard. He told me the contrary info but then said he still ordered the water to be fluoridated back when he took over a health director position. He’s not a conspiracy guy so I wonder where he got his info. He could be just a bit flaky with age.

1

One of the reasons we don't seal adult teeth is because insurance doesn't cover it and people don't want to pay for it (there are other reasons like prior fillings, loss of tooth structure, groove being less prominent, etc). If someone asks for it to be done and agrees to pay out of pocket we'll definitely do it.

6

I've had it done as a young adult. Fluoride treatments too. Maybe my dentist is weird, but some places definitely do it.

1
ogeistreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

found in cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage and kale.

That explains a lot

82
lemm.ee

Oui chef! I also found that its already being sold as a dietary supplement interesting.

11

Even a 90% chance of a reduction in cavities and plaque could not get me to eat kale.

4

If I'm reading this right, it's a digested form of something else in those vegetables. So adding broccoli to toothpaste isn't going to cut it. (Although I'm sure some brand on IG is already manufacturing that)

4
lemmy.world

Same with skin dermatology type conditions. How they fuck do we not have a pill or cream to cure itchy scalp. Why do I need to use expensive shampoos every two days the rest of my life or else I scratch my dandruffy scalp until it bleeds because there's some fungus I now have to deal with until my immune system gets so old that the fungus takes over

7

This probably won't help you but I'm saying it anyway just in case it does help.

I dealt with something similar for over a year that just wouldn't get better even after I tried all the dandruff shampoos I could find at the store. My doctor prescribed this lotion called taro-mometasone (I think?) and within a week the dandruff was gone and it never came back. This was about 7 years ago, and I haven't used the lotion since. And it was awful dandruff. It was becoming like scabs on my head and my hair was starting to fall out.

3

It's not long ago I saw a article about regrowth of theeth, but it was not a pill.

5
Mindlightreply
lemmy.world

We do but Illuminati made sure it's only available to about 1% of the population....

3

I read an article about that. IIRC it's mainly because there is only minimal bloodflow in your teeth - barely enough to supply it with nutrients (and still not enough you should skip external flouride etc.).

3
Patchesreply
sh.itjust.works

Because every dentist would kill a bitch to keep it secret. It is an extremely lucrative career.

1
feddit.de

Diindolylmethane might act like estrogen in the body, or might also block estrogen effects. So more research is necessary.

38
Che Bananareply
lemmy.ml

I will sacrifice myself and get titties as long as I have good teeth!

edit who am I kidding, I already have removedtiddies

43
Vlynreply
lemmy.zip

You ran right into the slur filter of lemmy.ml :)

10

ahh that makes sense now.. I was wondering wtf are removedtitties. I thought they were talking about a mastectomy or something.

12
Turunreply
feddit.de

I don't get what it's supposed to be. Can you spell it out for me with a between every letter or something to defeat the filter?

3
Vlynreply
lemmy.zip

I'm not the guy who wrote it, but if I had to guess he probably meant bi.tchtiddies?

The slur filter on lemmy.ml is weird, that's why I changed instances.

4

My first instinct was mantiddies, it makes sense with the "I'd grow a pair if it means healthier teeth". But it would be an absurd word to filter.

1

DIM doesn’t increase estrogen, it reduces it. It forces the body to metabolize estradiol into 2-hydroxyestrone, which cannot be converted back to estradiol and has lower binding affinity, so it just gets pissed out. It’s often used for breast and thyroid cancer treatments.

So yeah, this could be really bad for women.

9

Finally found the 1 out of 5 dentists that doesn't recommend chewing Trident gum.

3