Posts Tagged ‘Bacteria’

6 easy tips on how to cure your bad breath

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Are you having problems with Bad Breath?

Fixing bad breath depends on finding out what’s causing it.

This article will help you find the cause of your bad breath and more importantly help you eliminate it quickly using 6 key tips.

So first you need to eliminate the top 3 causes:

 

Unclean mouth Gastro infection Eating spicy food

 

 

6 key tips to fight bad breath and prevent it from returning.

1: Keep Your Mouth Clean – always floss!

Keep your mouth clean. That means a thorough brushing twice a day and flossing daily. Food gets trapped between teeth and can only be removed with floss. If they’re left to linger, bad breath is going to be yours. So clean your teeth using a good toothbrush twice a day. Also do not use any of the mouthwashes on the market that contain alcohol.

 

2: Clean Your Tongue

Clean your tongue, too, either with a tongue scraper or with your toothbrush and a small amount of toothpaste. Bacteria left on your tongue can contribute to less than fresh breath. Be sure to brush your tongue after you brush your teeth. Brushing or scraping must be done with care, as it is easy to damage the tongue’s tissues.

Another option is the use of the back of small spoon. But if you can afford a tongue scraper, definitely go for that instead. An option to clean the tongue and get rid of halitosis is using an effective home remedy, mixing baking soda with warm water. This combination will easily help you get rid of the acidity in the tongue; the same acidity that forms a fertile ground for bacteria.

 

3: Moisten your mouth

A dry mouth can quickly cause bad breath. Saliva is a natural antibacterial and helps clean your mouth. That awful morning breath is the result of reduced saliva flow at night. Chewing no sugar  gum throughout the day will help to keep your mouth moist as it encourages the production of saliva.

4: Rinse often

After eating each meal, make an escape for the bathroom and swill out your mouth with cool water. Swish the water around to remove food particles left in the mouth after a meal and prevent bad breath from setting in.

5: Avoid too much caffeine

Drinking lots of tea and especially coffee will dry your mouth out and slow down saliva production, so Limit your tea and coffee intake throughout the day. Instead drink herbal teas or water with lemon – a natural breath freshener.

6: Eat to Smell Sweet

Foods that help fight plaque may also help fight bad breath. Eat celery, carrots, peanuts or a bit of low-fat cheese if you want something to snack on. Some foods are best avoided or limited anyway, such as cheese, milk, ice creams – these all have a high content of proteins.

Fresh breath is within your reach and providing you follow these simple tips it can be yours within a short period of time.

Use this routine and very soon you will have kissable, fresh breath and increased self confidence.

Sue Davies

Sue Davies has created a complimentary report on how to banish your bad breath for good. To download it instantly visit www.banishbadbreathforgood.com

No! That Does Not Cause Acne

Monday, February 8th, 2010

There are a few old wives tales of the causes and behavior of acne that do not hold up under close examination. Luckily there is necessity for you to understand them in depth to separate what is real from what is false. Experience can help in the process.

Diet

There is no connection Between eating sweets or greasy food and the occurrence of acne. Sweet drinks will not cause acne. What is true is that your food has an effect on the general health of the body will have a slight effect in whether acne will or will not occur.

As an example, eating fatty food doesn’t directly translate into excess sebum secretion from the sebaceous glands and bring on an acne attack. Only iodized salt has any effect upon acne. The presence of too much iodized salt does not start an acne attack – though it will make an existing outbreak worse.

Hygiene

Those who have a non-nutritious or unhealthy diet frequently have lower cleanliness levels. Even so the influence on whether acne develops cannot be quantified.

The possibilities of an acne outbreak increase when a pore gets plugged and bacteria are trapped inside. To fight the bacteria, white blood cells flood the area. This often leads to inflamation and the development of pus, the make-up of a mild form of acne.

Generally, hygiene habits that tend to cause the pores to close can play a role. That being said, the effect can not be measured. It is accepted that washing or not washing has little effect upon whether a pore is blocked. After acne occurs keeping clean and looking after the skin is particularly important, though.

Although washing the face twice a day will help to keep it clean, failing to ash at all will not lead to acne. Naturally, a clean skin tends to be a healthier skin and will be able to resist the onset of acne but this does not mean that a dirty skin is a cause of acne.

An acne attack is triggered by too much sebum (skin oil). Once acne is obvious, cleanliness is more important because it will help the skin to shed some of the excess. Hygiene is more effective in cases where acne has made an appearance by providing a good surface for medications to do their work most effectively.

Scrubbing and harsh cleansers do more than clean the excess oil responsible for the acne instead, it damages the skin.

Makeup

There is no evidence that makeup will increase the odds of forming acne.

Stress

As a factor that weakens the immune system and can affect hormone levels, stress is often thought to have an effect on acne but no clear correlation is found in major studies. Stress might affect on an existing outbreak but does not feature on a list of causes.

Remember that, people with high stress levels generally have other problems with their health.

Medication

Using more than the recommended dose of pharmacy bought or prescription medications for the treatment of acne is harmful, not helpful. At best, it wastes medication. at worst it can cause scarring. Always read the instructions carefully. If over the counter medications don’t clear up the acne within a couple of weeks speak to a dermatologist about changing the treatment.

Arthur Webster

For more information and articles go to http://www.costadelsol.mylocalgazette.com/acne
I am too old and in too much of a hurry to waste time with fools. The world I see often differs to the world others see. This is probably because I see the world as it really is and not as I would like it to be nor as some elevated guru tells me that it is.Happiness is reality.

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