Did you know that poor smelling breath can be caused by bacteria and biofilm sitting in your mouth even after you brush and floss your teeth? Often people try to cover their bad breath up with gum, a breath mint, or mouthwash. Unfortunately, other people can still tell it's there. The answer is to go to the cause of the problem, not to attempt at masking it. Bad breath doesn't go away on its own.
Halitosis (bad breath) may simply be caused from the anaerobic (oxygen-free) bacteria living between your teeth and under your gums. The biofilm and toxins in these areas can not only cause decay, gum disease and gingivitis, but they can also contribute to bad breath.
Because these bacteria hide in the grooves around teeth, dental restorations, and under gums, they are extremely difficult to reach. In fact, even if you are flossing daily, you may still be leaving biofilm full of infectious bacteria in your mouth. Studies show that the physical flushing with an oral irrigator is actually more effective than floss for these hard to reach areas.
Sometimes food may even be packed so far under your gums that it sits there a very long time. You can imagine what that would smell like after a day or more. Some foods such as the kernels of popcorn can even be found under your gums up to a month after you've eaten your movie time snack.
By using an Irrigator every day, you can literally flush those stinky germs right out of your mouth. The stream of water irrigating under the gum lines, between your teeth, and even at the back of your tongue can help to remove the bad breath forming bacteria that you otherwise wouldn't be able to reach. It's so easy to do!
Managing advanced bad breath is all about daily plaque control - essentially sound oral hygiene. That means, in most cases, stopping the plaque in your mouth is really in your own hands. Brush every day. Floss every day. Period.
Dental professionals recommend oral irrigation as a great way to really clean teeth and gums. Oral irrigators get what toothbrushes and floss don't, so plaque and tartar and the resulting bad breath never come back.
Oral irrigators flood the mouth with a jet of water under pressure to flush offending food particles and bacteria from the mouth. And now there's fresh evidence that advanced gum disease responds well to oral irrigators. There are many types of irrigators. Fairly new on the market are irrigators that attach to your shower head or your sink faucets such as OralBreeze or Waterpik. A search on Amazon will produce 99% of available products. All types have pros and cons. The result is fresher breath and a healthier smile!
it could be because you don't clean it good enough or the result is also that when you go to bed your mouth gets closed for a while and thats why its stinky
not brushing you teeth at night and in the morning
Your breath smells bad because the dirt that you build up on your tongue makes that bad smell so brush your tongue everyday or you will have bad breath.
Typically, bad breath is caused by the same bacteria that cause tooth decay living in your mouth. You can prevent this by brushing your teeth and flossing regularly.
I do not have a stale mouth. Who said that i have a stale mouth? :D :D
why does an 80 year old man who doesnt brush his teeth smell so bad......it is an old dog....brush his teeth for him
No, it just makes them smell bad!
Your breath would smell bad.
Yellow Teeth, Bad Breath, and Wrinkles ect.
well unsure if this question is a joke or not i will still answer it :D. some people smell bad because of bad hygiene, like not taking showers, not brushing teeth or even they were around or are a smoker.
When she wakes up in the morning it smells bad, but after she brushes her teeth, it's fine.
Yes, people did smell more strongly than is acceptable in modern times, and more had bad teeth than do now. But that was the way life was, and people put up with it because they knew of no other way of live.
Bacteria in the mouth are emitting waste gases that smell bad. The bacteria can be on the teeth, in cavities, on the tongue, on the palate or on the gums, especially if these are inflamed. Bacteria can also live on prosthetic teeth.
sharp teeth, chemical gas that causes odor that is very unpleasant, can run away by climbing trees or swimming. hope that helps
2 reasons. The dog ate something other than it's food or it has bad teeth.
No Albania does not smell bad !!
Brush your teeth with andeas pink salt and bath with a little bit of bleach in the bathtub. Don't get it in your eyes though!!