So my teeth used to be heavily crowded and impossible to floss, plus as a teen I had very serious depression and executive dysfunction. My teeth were a disaster by the time I got braces on, and those things seriously impeded my ability to brush and stuff. I got them off a few years ago; one of my molars legitimately broke in half when I bit down on soft chocolate, it was so bad.

It’s been a lot of repairative work and I’ve been lucky to have access to it. I’m told I’m doing well on caring for my teeth now which is rad. But two seperate people, my dentist and one of his guys, made a funny suggestion.

“Yeah sis, you got this super strong toothpaste right, 1.1% sodium fluoride? Just leave some of that on your teeth every night, in your lil plastic retainees, trust me sis.”

This feels so incredibly wrong, like I didn’t even rinse my mouth, and now there is toothpaste on my teeth. I’m supposed to sleep like this? This shit is as bad as upper lip estradiol absorbtion. Why am I tormented by silly sensory suggestions lately? ‘Just leave the toothpaste on’…

  • Demoncracy
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    4 months ago

    What toothpaste? Does it help with bleeding gums? My teeth are fine, but my gums not, but instead of any toothpaste, all dentists want me to pay a few hundreds for a “deep cleaning”. I don’t see any issues with my teeth genuinely and don’t have the money, and my insurance doesn’t cover it.

      • Demoncracy
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        4 months ago

        I wish the dentists would do anything, but they say I need to pay hundreds for the deep cleaning. No mention of any sort of medication. I am going to try to do daily flossing and see how that goes.

        • FloridaBoi [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          4 months ago

          Yeah make sure you’re brushing at least twice per day and flossing daily maybe followed by a swishing with Listerine (not alcohol free). The issue is that a deep cleaning attempts to go low beneath the gum line and is a different kind of cleaning than a regular one.

          When it comes to paying they may be able to either waive part of the fee or allow you to pay over time. The deep cleaning often takes more than one visit since the mouth is treated in quadrants. If it is painful you should be able to request numbing gel too.

    • DamarcusArt
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      4 months ago

      I use a special flouride toothpaste to help prevent tooth decay, and if your gums are having issues, it could be because you don’t floss enough, it’ll hurt for a couple of days (or even weeks) but if you floss thoroughly every day your gums should do a lot better. I was also told by my dentist that when I’m brushing my teeth I should aim much lower down, touching the gums, instead of the top of my teeth to help prevent that sort of thing. It’s mainly about making sure you floss daily and stay well hydrated so your gums don’t recede. It hurts a lot at first, but after a couple of weeks it gets much better than before.

      If you have a lot of trouble using regular floss, you can use something like these (I don’t know what they would be called in your part of the world, but they make flossing so much easier than regular floss):

      • Demoncracy
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        4 months ago

        I have those, but my teeth bleed so much after I don’t really want to use them. I’ll try to force myself soon. I know of the technique to also brush your gums, I’ve been doing it for many many years.

        • DamarcusArt
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          4 months ago

          It does suck for a while, your mouth will bleed a lot at first and it hurts a lot, but it stops hurting after a while (and is much cheaper and less painful than a deep clean). The hardest part for me was remembering to do it every day, you can forget a day every now and then after your mouth is used to it, but you need to do it every day for a couple of weeks at least. Also the hydration part is really important too, make sure you’re drinking enough water every day, it helps a lot with receding gums.