Many people brush more than the recommended number of times per day - especially after a rich meal.
But dentists warn that the extra brushing could be doing more harm than good.
Brushing within half an hour of eating a meal or drinking a cup of coffee could ensure your teeth suffer worse damage.
After
drinking fizzy or acidic drinks, the acid burns into the enamel of your
teeth - and the layer below the enamel, called 'dentin'.
Brushing
at the 'wrong' time - particularly within 20 minutes of finishing a
meal - can drive the acid deeper into your teeth, corroding them far
faster than they would have rotted by themselves.
'With
brushing, you could actually push the acid deeper into the enamel and
the dentin,' says Dr Howard R. Gamble, president of the Academy of
General Dentistry in an interview with the New York Times.
Research
has shown that teeth corrode faster if they are brushed in the half
hour after an acidic soft drink, which 'stripped' them - demineralising
them.
Volunteers wore human dentin samples in their mouths, and tested different brushing regimens.
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