29: Healthy Drinks Can Still Harm Teeth - The Hidden Acid and Timing Factors Dentistry Misses with Dr. Rob Karlinsey and Tami
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概要
What if some of your most “healthy” choices for gut health are quietly eroding your teeth?
In this episode of Dental Formulator’s Playbook, Dr. Rob and co-host Tami build on Episodes 26 and 27 to explain why pH alone does not tell the full story. They explore fermented dairy (yogurt, buttermilk, fermented milks), kombucha, and prebiotic cultures like lactobacilli, plus how timing, sipping habits, and formulation choices can increase risks for erosion and caries. The conversation also expands into restorative dentistry, including a 2024 study comparing two “compomer” materials (including the sparkly kid-friendly option) and how different liquids can change surface roughness over time.
Key Topics Covered
- Why the type of acid can predict damage better than pH alone
- Fermented dairy basics: common pH range (about 4.0 to 4.5) and why buffering can be misleading
- How lactobacilli tie into oral health: caries risk, acid production (lactic and sometimes acetic acid)
- Why some “oral probiotic” mints can be a tradeoff, especially depending on your physiology
- Kombucha pH (about 2.5 to 3.5) and why sipping over time can raise erosion risk
- Timing matters: why yogurt or acidic drinks right before bed can be risky during low-saliva conditions
- A children’s diet study reference: reported erosion rates tied to yogurt, orange juice, and carbonated drinks
- A look at compomers (composite + glass ionomer hybrids): what they are and how they are used clinically
- How exposure to cola, juice, water, and milk affected restoration surface roughness in a 2024 paper
- Why roughness matters: plaque traps, periodontal risk, and even tooth appearance (light reflection)
Highlights and Takeaways
- “Healthy” does not always mean tooth-friendly. Gut benefits and enamel risks can coexist.
- Sipping style and duration can matter as much as the drink itself. The longer acids linger, the higher the risk.
- Fermented dairy can be well-buffered yet still contribute to enamel softening, especially with frequent exposure and poor timing.
- Lactobacilli and its role as part of the caries picture, especially alongside streptococci, depending on the model and context.
- Restorations have their own vulnerabilities. Some materials can roughen quickly in acidic liquids, while others may develop deposits over time.
- A rough surface is not just cosmetic. It can create plaque traps and raise oral health...
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