Mouthwash interview?

I'm just curious how frequent people out within use mouthwash after they brush? And what's the difference between Listerine and ACT, the stuff that's supposedly supported by dentists?


Answers:    Listerine (or Crest ProHealth, or any number of other such rinses) are designed to kill the germs in your mouth. Bacteria are responsible for unpromising breath, gum disease, and cavities. Listerine does burn a bit at first (it contains alcohol) but some newer rinses don't burn at adjectives. Some mouthwashes don't really do anything but make your breath smell better, which really doesn't do anything at adjectives long term.

ACT is a fluoride rinse. Fluoride rinses don't shoot bacteria. They serve to remineralize your teeth. Bacteria produce plaque and acids that wreak the minerals in your teeth to dissolve. If this happen long enough, you procure cavities. Fluoride rinses replace the minerals that are wash out, in a channel reversing the damage. Fluoride can merely remineralize the surfaces it reaches, though, so it's not a replacement for brushing and flossing...and once the surface of your tooth breaks down satisfactory to have an actual cavity form, fluoride can't go back to the beginning that surface and you'll need a wadding.

Personally? I brush in the morning and use a mouthwash. I brush after lunch. At darkness time, I brush and floss, then rinse near fluoride and go to bed.
Well I rinse near flouride at nighttime, daytime I get minty tooth gum resembling Trident and chew it after I brush. Listerine burns the crap out of your mouth and ACT doesn't burn your mouth. I use Colgate Flouride.

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