Don’t Bother Flossing

Don’t Bother Flossing

What?! Is the sky falling? What dentist would dare utter such blasphemy!

Stick with me for a moment. You may learn something about flossing.

Here are the facts as I see them after more than twenty years in dental practice:

Most patients don’t floss.
Most patients don’t like to floss.
Most patients won’t floss even if you explain the benefits of flossing at every checkup visit for ten years.
Most patients are convinced flossing makes their gums bleed and is uncomfortable to do.
Most patients will tell you they floss, but “probably not as much as I should.”
So really, why bother?

Another observation I have made about flossing regards what people think flossing is. I will sometimes hand a patient a piece of floss and ask them to show me how they floss.  Without exception, I have seen patients pass the floss between their teeth and then pop it back out.

That sounds right, doesn’t it? Special effects department please sound the buzzer. That’s not flossing.

Add to this the fact that most patients will only perform this routine once in a while. If you call that “flossing” I say don’t lose sleep over the fact that you are not flossing regularly. That can be effective at pulling food out from in between your teeth, though, so feel free to do so. But if that’s not flossing, just what is it, really?

Flossing is the action of taking a length of floss – either the conventional “string” kind or pre-threaded on a fork-like device – and then passing it between your teeth while holding it in a “C-shape” against the side of the tooth. You then take the floss and rub the edge of the tooth, sliding it all the way under the gum-line in an up and down motion. How often can one do this? After every meal would not be too much. But if people did this at least once a day, the average case would see dramatic results after an average of two weeks of daily flossing.

If you haven’t been flossing regularly here is what you can expect: your gums will bleed when you start to floss. It is also likely to be a little uncomfortable at first. But over time, the bleeding should stop. If you haven’t had a dental checkup and cleaning for a while, it is a good idea to do so this first. Flossing against existing tartar will be an unending battle. Once the teeth are clean, however, daily flossing will usually result in pink, firm and healthy gums that don’t bleed. Other benefits? Fresher breath and reduced inflammation – which also means a lowered chance of heart attack and stroke.

If you only floss once in a while, though, inflamed gums will likely never get up to a point where the occasional activity makes any difference. So, if you don’t make it a discipline, why bother? But if you would like healthy teeth and gums for a lifetime, start flossing today!

 

The “Flossing Thing”

The “Flossing Thing”

Here is an interesting exchange I had with a patient not too long ago. I’m getting ready to start a cleaning after completing my examination.  His gums are red (he has gingivitis), there is plaque visible, and I just know those gums will bleed when I start to clean them. I’d like to help him get this under control, but I suspect he doesn’t floss, so I ask “Do you floss?”

His answer: “Whenever I need to.”

I’m thinking: “That would be, like, EVERY DAY.”  But instead I ask: “How often is that?”

He replies: “Whenever food becomes noticeably stuck between my teeth.”

I’m actually detecting just a little annoyance now, and then he says: “Yeah, every dentist I have ever been to mentions the flossing thing.”

Well, I suppose I could talk about his favorite color, or maybe something equally inane, like the weather — but somehow the ‘flossing thing’ seemed appropriate.  And then it occurred to me, maybe that IS “flossing” for this guy.  And how many others, I wondered?

Therefore, in my quest to help rid the world of gingivitis and periodontal disease, (which just may be the shared goal of “every other dentist” who has recommended flossing) I’d like to clarify a few points about what it is and what it isn’t. While floss is unquestionably effective at removing food particles from between your teeth, just picking out the occasional chunk of steak from between your teeth doesn’t classify as “flossing.”

Flossing involves taking a piece of floss – say, about eighteen inches or so – grasping it between your thumb and index finger (just a few inches apart), then holding it in a “C” shape against the side of your tooth. Pre-threaded flossers are just fine in my opinion. Use whatever you are most comfortable with and whatever will get you to floss regularly.  Rub the floss up and down the sides of every tooth.  You actually want to slide the floss under the gum line.  This cleans out areas your toothbrush cannot effectively reach.

C-ShapeImagine not cleaning some parts of your teeth – ever.  Or maybe, you just clean some teeth and not others.  Do you think the unclean teeth might become more subject to tooth decay?  If you answered “Yes!” then you would be right.  This is exactly what occurs when you don’t floss.  The parts of the teeth that are in contact with each other never get brushed. It’s not physically possible.  So, a sizeable portion of all the fillings I end up having to place for patients are between the teeth. This is so easily helped . . . floss!

If you are just beginning to floss, you can expect your gums to bleed.  Don’t let this ‘freak you out.’  A number of patients have said to me over the years “I tried flossing but it made my gums bleed, so I quit.”  No.  Bacteria, gingivitis, and nutritional deficiencies made your gums bleed.  Flossing will help.  You just need to stick with it until you notice less and less bleeding.

It is important to have your teeth and gums examined regularly.  While gingivitis and periodontal disease are bad enough, there are a few even more serious conditions that could contribute to bleeding gums.

I actually could go on for quite a while about the many benefits to your overall health that flossing brings, but I’ll spare you for now.  Or shall we just talk about the weather?