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Deichgoettin
3 months ago

Not necessarily.

In most cases, oral odor is disturbances in the mouth and throat area – and not as often assumed – due to stomach problems.

Often a lack of or a false oral hygiene leads to oral odor, because food remains are not carefully removed and these then begin to decompose into the intermediary spaces. This is why it is urgently necessary, tooth silk and possibly. to use interdental brushes.

You can even check the greenness of your oral hygiene by using dental color tablets. These make existing dental pads visible so you can see exactly if and where your vulnerabilities are when brushing teeth. These are available in pharmacies or drugstore markets. If you have cleaned your teeth optimally, you will not see any discolorations on your teeth.

  • Carious teeth can lead to odor.
  • Furthermore, oral odor is promoted by too much protein. Due to poor oral hygiene and protein-rich diet, the fäulnisbakterien multiply and produce oral odour. Mouth rinses are not a solution, they destroy the mouth flora in the long term.
  • Clean your tongue of beating. For tongue cleaning, there are special tongue cleaners with which you can remove the coverings from the tongue.
  • Drink a lot, as liquid deficiency or Mouth dryness can cause bad breath.
  • An empty stomach can also produce oral odor.
  • Maybe you don’t have milk products? That could also be a reason for bad breath. By contrast, parsley, eucalyptus, fennel, chamomile, mint, myrrrhe, cloves, rosemary, sage, thyme and cinnamon can help. The essential oils of these plants also help against odour.
  • Tomatoes Almond stones would also be a possibility. An HNO doctor or your dentist can tell you if you have almond stones.

My tip, first go to the ZA, let the teeth clean, remove the dental stone and control your oral hygiene when everything is OK, then find your doctor.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l44LrzgZ0yk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeo6VL0AgnE

SstyxXx
3 months ago

That could be a way. Or it’s wrong diet.

In infections of the respiratory tract, such as cold or flu, this is often the case.

Chrisi614
3 months ago

As far as I have read it is possible

TheAmigos
3 months ago

That can be. Let the doctor explain this

Curasanus
3 months ago

Very rare. 90% of the oral odor comes from bacteria on the tongue, 5% of open pockets of the gum and 5% of the stomach.