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I grew up in a house with well water, no fluoride. I've had a million cavities, and my dentist suggested that was a contributing factor, although certainly diet and genetics are too.
Also, wish I had a link to the article, but I was reading about how whether you "have" a cavity depends on your dentist's interpretation of the x-rays and their philosophy about treatment. Some dentists will see a light area and say "let's fill that before it gets worse" and others will note it and see how things develop. It was actually pretty alarming because sounds like professional standards for dentistry are looser than some other areas of medicine, and the description rang true for some of the dentists I've seen.
This is definitely a thing. I mentioned no cavities, but I have had some "slight decalcification we might want to address before it gets worse" that then got better on their own.
Yeah, I would much prefer if someone framed it that way than "you have decay, let's schedule an appointment for a filling"
It’s notable that medical journals went evidence based in the 70s but only some dental journals made the same switch.
Grew up in a well water house, we were prescribed fluoride pills.
First cavity came at 36
How long did you take fluoride pills, as an adult or only as a child?
I started when I was 5 and probably stopped when I was old enough to forget taking them and not be reminded to, probably around 16 or so.
I don’t recall to be honest.
Yeah, I think that's why my dentist gave me fluoride treatments as a child. Have you gotten any as an adult?
I think I had one treatment as an adult. But a dental hygienist recommended rinsing every night with the purple Listerine that has fluoride in it, which... hasn't hurt? I think it's doing the trick and I haven't had more cavities since, but of course couldn't say for sure if that's why.
Interesting, I get a fluoride treatment at the dentist every time. It’s just part of the thing, why I can’t eat for 45 minutes after.