Root Beer May Be “Safest” Soft Drink For Teeth
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Exposing teeth to soft drinks, even for a short period of time, causes dental erosion - and prolonged exposure can lead to significant enamel loss. Root beer products, however, are non-carbonated and do not contain the acids that harm teeth, according to a study in the March/April 2007 issue of General Dentistry, the AGD’s clinical, peer-reviewed journal. That might be something to consider during the next visit to the grocery store.
Consumers often consider soft drinks to be harmless, believing that the only concern is sugar content. Most choose to consume “diet” drinks to alleviate this concern. However, diet drinks contain phosphoric acid and/or citric acid and still cause dental erosion - though considerably less than their sugared counterparts.
“Drinking any type of soft drink poses risk to the health of your teeth,” says AGD spokesperson Kenton Ross, DMD, FAGD. Dr. Ross recommends that patients consume fewer soft drinks by limiting their intake to meals. He also advises patients to drink with a straw, which will reduce soda’s contact with teeth.
“My patients are shocked to hear that many of the soft drinks they consume (are comparable to) battery acid,” Dr. Ross explains. For example, one type of cola ranked 2.39 on the acid scale, compared to battery acid, which is 1.0.
Researchers concluded that non-colas cause a greater amount of erosion than colas. Citric acid is the predominant acid in non-cola drinks and is a major factor in why non-cola drinks are especially erosive. There is a significant difference between sugared and diet colas.
“The bottom line,” Dr. Ross stresses, “is that the acidity in all soft drinks is enough to damage your teeth and should be avoided.”
[tags]dentist, tooth, soft drink, acidity, enamel, teeth[/tags]

6 Comments
Ian McLaughlin
March 21st, 2007
at 4:42pm
Ummm…… a pH of 2.39 (phosphoric acid in cola) is worse than a pH of 1.0 (sulphuric acid in battery acid)?? The pH scale ranges from 0 (the most acidic) to 14 (the most alkaline) with 7 being neutral. 1.0 is more acidic (and therefore ‘worse’ and more corrosive) than 2.39. More scare tactics.
threehtirty
March 21st, 2007
at 5:20pm
Rootbeer IS carbonated I’m drinking some right now
FletcherL
March 22nd, 2007
at 9:01am
“Root beer products, however, are non-carbonated”
??????????
Which Root Beer products are those? Good old A&W is definitely fizzy.
David
March 26th, 2007
at 10:19pm
Here is the …….. TRUTH…..
YES… it is bad for teeth…….. and..
YES… Rootbeer… has carbonantion..
BUT…………….. they state….. citric acid….
THIS …. is YET another….. STUPID SCARE..
HELLO….. WE drink Orange Juice…….. HOW much
more ….. citric acid can you get……….
SO you’re telling me ….. Ornage Juice is BAD for your teeth ????
HOW about ANY type JUICE… that contains Citric Acid ???
GIVE me a break.
OH…. BY the way………. TOO much MILK is also bad for the Teeth..
algal
April 4th, 2007
at 2:33pm
Yes… juices have lots of sugar.
To prevent tooth decay, you must avoid sugars and starches (similar to sugars). Sugar plays a harmful role in tooth decay. The bacteria that form together to become plaque use sugar as a form of energy.
Alex
October 30th, 2007
at 5:02pm
This is all true, one of my teeth becsme hollowed out and collapsed due to pop, even though i dont drink much of it. It will cause $4000 all together to fix my tooth.
DON’T DRINK POP!!