Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Eat Grapes To Protect Your Teeth From Decay

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jun, 2017 11:12 PM
    Eating grapes can protect your teeth from decaying as a recent study suggests a natural compound found in grapes can strengthen teeth and boost the strength of fillings.
     
    Scientists from the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Dentistry say this discovery could stop people from losing teeth as the grape seed extract - a byproduct of the wine making industry which can be purchased from health food shops - has long been linked to health benefits such as improved heart function and better circulation.
     
    Now the substance could reduce tooth extractions by increasing the longevity of composite-resin fillings - or tooth-coloured fillings - which typically last only five to seven years.
     
    The results suggested that the extract has been found to toughen dentin, the tissue that makes up the bulk of the tooth, which lies beneath the hard external enamel, reports the Mail Online.
     
    This means that when teeth are damaged, the remaining structure can be made stronger to bond with materials used in fillings.
     
     
    It could spell good news for patients who opt for resin fillings because they are more aesthetically pleasing, even though they are not as tough amalgam fillings, which last 10 to 15 years or more.
     
    A researcher Dr Ana Bedran-Russo said that when fillings fail, decay forms around it and the seal is lost. The team wants to reinforce the interface, which will make the resin bond better to the dentin.
     
    Tooth decay can occur when acid is produced from plaque, which builds up on your teeth.
     
    If the plaque is allowed to build up, the acid can begin to break down the surface of your tooth, causing holes known as cavities.
     
    The cavity begins to eat away at the second level of tooth material that lies beneath the enamel: the dentin.
     
    Interlocking the resin and collagen-rich dentin provides better adhesion and does not rely on moisture, the researchers stated.
     
    The study appeared in the journal of Dental Research.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Zika Spread Through Sex By Man With No Symptoms

    Zika Spread Through Sex By Man With No Symptoms
      In earlier cases of sexual transmission, the virus was spread by someone who at some point had symptoms.

    Zika Spread Through Sex By Man With No Symptoms

    Scalpel-free Brain Surgery Safe, Effective For Essential Tremor: Researchers

    Scalpel-free Brain Surgery Safe, Effective For Essential Tremor: Researchers
    TORONTO — For years — decades, actually — Noreen Smith couldn't perform the simple actions of everyday living that most of us take for granted: drinking a cup of coffee; writing her name; styling her hair.

    Scalpel-free Brain Surgery Safe, Effective For Essential Tremor: Researchers

    Advocates Call For Changes To Canada's HIV/AIDS Disclosure Law, Call It 'Unfair'

    Advocates Call For Changes To Canada's HIV/AIDS Disclosure Law, Call It 'Unfair'
    TORONTO — The recent arrests of two men accused of failing to disclose their HIV status to their sexual partners have renewed calls for changes to the current legislation that advocates say contributes to the fear and stigma surrounding the disease.

    Advocates Call For Changes To Canada's HIV/AIDS Disclosure Law, Call It 'Unfair'

    If Overweight, Be Friendly With Thinner People

    If Overweight, Be Friendly With Thinner People
      Participants identified the four adults with whom they spent free time most frequently and rated each contact's body mass relative to their own. 

    If Overweight, Be Friendly With Thinner People

    Florida Zika Cases Rise To 25 As Back-to-school Day Nears

      Florida's Department of Health says active transmission has been only happening in a 1-square-mile area encompassing Miami's Wynwood arts district.

    Florida Zika Cases Rise To 25 As Back-to-school Day Nears

    P.E.I. Hamlet Puts Faith In Stompin' Tom Centre, Honouring Its Most Famous Son

    P.E.I. Hamlet Puts Faith In Stompin' Tom Centre, Honouring Its Most Famous Son
    This P.E.I. hamlet has begun work on a gamble: That Canada still loves Stompin' Tom Connors as much as the country-folk legend loved it.

    P.E.I. Hamlet Puts Faith In Stompin' Tom Centre, Honouring Its Most Famous Son