HALLOWEEN IS A TON OF fun every year, and itโs right around the corner! We love the costumes, the decorations, and the local events, but weโre a little wary of all that candy. Sugar isnโt just tasty to us; the harmful bacteria in our mouths love it. If you want to make Halloween a little healthier for your teeth, hereโs a handy breakdown of how different types of treats and candies rank in terms of promoting good dental health.
Types of Halloween Candy to Avoid
Anything hard, sticky, or sour is going to be bad for your teeth. Hard candy takes a while to dissolve, which means your teeth are exposed to sugar for a long time. Sticky candy is like breakfast in bed for bacteria, adhering to the teeth and pushing the sugar right up against the enamel and gum tissue. Sour candy contains acid as well as sugar, so itโs doubly bad for teeth.
Candy Thatโs Good for Teeth?
Not all candy is awful for oral health. Some is actually pretty healthy. If youโre a fan of candy bars, aim for the types with plenty of nuts (assuming you donโt have a nut allergy or an orthodontic appliance). The nuts break up the stickiness and sugar of all the caramel and nougat, and they contain important nutrients.
Chocolate is on the good end of the oral health spectrum, and the darker, the better. Chocolate contains flavanoids and polyphenols, compounds that limit oral bacteria, fight bad breath, and slow tooth decay. Dark chocolate has more of these compounds and their benefits are less offset by sugar than in sweeter milk chocolate.
The best candy option for your teeth, unsurprisingly, is sugar-free gum sweetened with xylitol. Other types of candy that use xylitol arenโt very common (yet), so you might not find much of it, but xylitol gum is a great sweet treat to aim for when trick-or-treating. Xylitol not only doesnโt feed oral bacteria, it actually hurts it!
Fight Back Against the Effects of Sugar
Aside from avoiding the more harmful candies in favor of dark chocolate, candy bars, and xylitol gum, there are other ways we can combat the effects sugar has on our teeth:
- Donโt give harmful oral bacteria an all-day buffet! If youโre planning on eating a lot of candy, itโs better to eat it all in one sitting than spreading it out across an entire day. This way, your saliva will have a chance to neutralize the acids and wash away leftover sugar.
- Drink water after enjoying some candy. It will help rinse out the sugar sticking to your teeth.
- Wait half an hour after eating candy, then brush your teeth! Good brushing and flossing habits are essential to protecting your teeth from the effects of sugary candy.
Another Great Resource Is the Dentist!
Being careful about which candy you eat and when, rinsing with water, and maintaining good daily brushing and flossing habits are all great, but donโt forget about the best resource you have: the dentist! Schedule a cleaning appointment in early November to make sure Halloween hasnโt had a lasting effect on your teeth, or schedule one in October to get ahead of the game!