Category: Dental Blog

The default blog category.

  • Christmas Draw

    Christmas Draw

    Just like Christmas we want our Christmas Draw to be full of surprises!

    Every week a new item will be added to the draw in Facebook. Enter here or share, comment, or like us on Facebook to win. At participating Willow Dental locations only.

    Every effort gets another entry.

    In the Contact Us form below where it says  “Your Message” enter I LOVE TURKEY and tell us why you want to win.

    Here are the other prizes that have been added to the draw:

  • Heavy Duty Deluxe Non Stick Roasting Pan Christmas Draw

    Just like Christmas.. we are leaking the contents of our surprise gift basket slowly now. You will really want this prize by December 6th.
    FIRST ITEM: A beautiful heavy duty deluxe non stick roasting pan with a float rack. Stand by for the next items…coming to you soon..

    Simply fill in the Contact Us Form and in the message area enter the words DELUXE ROASTING PAN before you submit it.

    You will be entered in the Christmas Draw.

  • Carbon Steel Non Stick Roaster Christmas Draw

    Carbon Steel Non Stick Roaster Christmas Draw

    We all love surprises .. so for this Christmas Draw we are leaking out the contents of our surprise gift, a few items at a time. STAY TUNED: You will really want this prize by December 6th.

    FIRST ITEM: A professional Heavy Gauge CARBON STEEL non stick roaster and rack. Stand by for the next items…coming to you soon..

    Simply fill in the Contact Form and enter the words CARBON STEEL ROASTER in the message area to enter the Christmas Draw.

  • Hygiene Frequency

    Hygiene Frequency

    Dental Hygiene Frequency

    Do Dental clinics ask you to come back twice a year or every six months because they need to create business?  You know how every six months, the hygienist always brings up the topic of “Have you been flossing”. She asks with so much regularity that you wonder if she had nothing else to make conversation.

    Without doubt the truth about the six month return visit request, is that there is some truths to be told.

    As someone who is a bit anal about life, my brushing and teeth cleaning routines are more regular than clock work.  As well, my routine is fully encompassing.  After brushing with the best toothpaste recommended for my sensitivity level, the electric toothbrush is burnished and used for the regulation period of minimum another minute so that the total brushing time is the full recommended two minutes.  Of course, there is flossing with the exact width waxed floss helps to get all those particles between the teeth.  No matter the late hour, I will still floss because I hear my hygienist words repeated, “ Not flossing is like taking a shower and not washing under your armpits.  I also remember my young six year old niece who came home from the dentist and was diagnosed with four cavities all between her teeth because they did not floss her teeth.   The final moments are spent using a soft pick which is a tiny pliable plastic brush to clean between the crevices between my gums and teeth.  I have some large spaces between my gums and teeth which are called pockets and also the signs for gum disease.

    The vigor of this routine was instigated only a few years ago when my hygienist took a digital photo of my gums.  For the first time in my life I saw tartar.  It was disgusting.  Large lumps of white clay like substance laying all along the gum line.  Tartar is like barnacles…hard, tough, and impossible to remove unless it is done professionally by a hygienist.  It is formed from food that is left on teeth.  That forms plaque which is soft and white.  If plaques is not removed it becomes hard and sticks to the gum line.  It is the tartar that is the cause of gum disease which includes receding gums, bone loss, bleeding gums, pain and eventually perfectly healthy teeth just fall out due to the loss of the bone around the tooth.

    So yes, they do insist on six months for regular tartar removal or commonly known as a dental cleaning or hygiene appointment.    The accumulation of tartar varies in every mouth.  The average person will have enough buildup in six months to warrant a professional teeth cleaning.  Many others actually need to return every three to four months, based on their dental health or in other words how quickly they build up tartar, how many pockets there are and how deep they are.