Friday, October 26, 2012

Buy Your ToothBrush Online Save $3.00. Hot on Pinterest

Tooth Brush It http://toothbrushit.com/ made their Pinterest debut today on Hot On Pinterest.

This company shows shows you how you can order professional quality dentist recommended toothbrushes and save money over buying it in the store. See their Pins for Adult and Children
Toothbrushes. Currently their site is running a $3.00 Off per order special.

Buy now or Re-pin on Pinterest to remind you later.

Source: toothbrushit.com via Jo on Pinterest
Source: pinterest.com via Jo on Pinterest

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Best View From a Dentist’s Chair


Patients of Dr. Timothy P. Nary in Breckenridge, Colorado, hardly need Novocaine when they get drilled. To relax, all they have to do is look out his window toward the majestic Colorado Rockies. When dental hygienist Barbara Wolitzky, who’s worked with Dr. Nary for nine years, says “Open wide,” she gets down to business — and gives patients a jaw-gaping view.

You Think You Get Weird Requests at Your Job? Try Being a Dentist

Anyone who deals with the public on a regular basis is bound to get some weird requests, but the things that come out of people's mouths about their teeth can seem particularly strange. Lately, prosthetic fangs, gold "grills" and tooth tattoos have become commonplace. It's the more unusual ones that give dentists cause for professional pause.
In advance of their annual mid-winter meeting, the Chicago Dental Society surveyed more than 300 members to find out the strangest dental requests they'd ever received from patients. (Don't go getting any ideas now.) Here they are, in descending order:
10. "Can you extract my tooth without anesthesia?"
9. "Please wire my mouth shut to aid in my diet."
8. "Can you ID this set of dentures left in the bathroom of the bar I work at?"
7. "I will pay you or your hygienist to floss my teeth at my office every day."
6. "Pull all my teeth, and just give me dentures."
5. "I just broke off my engagement. Can you prepare my tooth so that I can keep the diamond in it?"
4. "Will you give me local anesthesia in my lips? I'm going in for permanent "lipstick" tattoos on my lips, and would like to avoid the pain."
3. "May I have an emergency cleaning visit? It's my high school reunion and I need a bright, white smile to face my old boyfriend."
2. "Can I keep the teeth you pull out of my mouth? I'd like to make a necklace out of them."
And the No. 1 strangest request a dentist ever received:

1. "Can you give my dog braces?"

Woof!
Source: aol.com

Secrets From Your Dentist

Do you floss about as often as you flip your mattress? Do you spend more time putting toothpaste on your brush than actually cleaning your teeth? Dentists notice these things. And that’s not all. They also know when you’re asking for a procedure that’s going to disappoint you and when insurance companies are stinting on the care your smile needs.

We asked 22 dentists from across the country to tell us what they’re really thinking as they peer at our teeth. What came out of their mouths will change the way you treat yours.

You Don’t Get It Some truly educated people think that if nothing in their mouth hurts, they’re fine. High cholesterol doesn’t hurt, either, but it’s a big problem. I honestly think that the general population doesn’t understand that their mouth is part of their body. – Danine Fresch Gray, DDS, general dentist, Arlington, Virginia

If your hands bled when you washed them, you’d run to the doctor. But in the public’s mind, bleeding gums are okay. Unless you’re really whaling away with your brush, if your gums bleed even a little, that’s periodontal disease, period. – Ron Schefdore, DMD, general dentist, Chicago, Illinois

The advice to see your dentist twice a year applies only if you have healthy gums. Most people don’t. – Chris Kammer, DDS, cosmetic dentist, Middleton, Wisconsin

Many of my patients have periodontal disease affecting their back teeth, but their front teeth are fine. Evidently, they brush only what others see. – Joel Slaven, DDS, general dentist, Valencia, California

Dentists often tell patients with advanced gum disease to floss more often. But flossing is useless at that point. Imagine trying to clean out the bottom of a shirt pocket with a piece of string tied to your fingers. – Reid Winick, DDS, holistic dentist, New York, New York

People come to me with a mouthful of tooth decay and say, “I got my grandfather’s soft teeth.” I don’t even know what soft teeth are. – Bryan Tervo, DDS, expert at JustAnswer.com