Skip to main content

Raisins and Dental Health

Raisins have a long-standing reputation as a food that promotes dental caries (cavities),” based on decades-old studies on rats that ranked raisins up there with cupcakes as among the most cavity-promoting foods. To this day, you’ll see dental authorities advise against eating dried fruit, like raisins. As I discuss in my video Do Raisins Cause Cavities?, more recent evidence—from studies done on actual people—“casts some doubt on the role of raisins with regards to tooth decay.”

The formation of cavities depends on three factors: acid, adherence (the stickiness of food to teeth), and the bacteria that make up the dental plaque. If you have kids swish some sugar water in their mouth, within five minutes, the pH of the plaque on their teeth plummets as the bacteria convert the sugar to acid. A commercial raisin bran cereal was practically just as bad. Bran flakes alone, without the raisins, weren’t as bad, however. Is that because the raisins in raisin bran cereal are crusted with sugar, though, or because of the raisins themselves? Well, raisins didn’t lead to much acid at all, and the big surprise was that if you combined the non-sugar-coated raisins with the bran flakes to create a kind of experimental raisin bran cereal, the raisins seemed to help prevent some of the acid the bran flakes were causing.

Although raisins are about 70 percent pure sugar, they caused less acid to be produced, and don’t actually appear to adhere to our teeth. Wait. Raisins do stick to our teeth, don’t they? Twenty-one foods were put to the test, and there was actually no relationship between food retention and how sticky the foods appeared to be. Bits of cookies, crackers, and potato chips actually stuck to the teeth the longest, whereas foods you’d think would stick, like caramels and raisins, disappeared within minutes. Fresh fruit like apples and bananas disappeared from the mouth almost immediately.

Phytonutrients in grapes appear to actually prevent the adherence of bacteria and prevent plaque formation, so much so that grape pomace, the by-product of wine making, is being investigated as a cavity-preventing food additive. Or, you could just drink the wine. Non-alcoholic wine inhibits the growth of the primary cavity-causing bacteria, though raisins would probably be a more appropriate snack for kids.

There’s a new test available to measure the cavity-causing activity of plaque bacteria. A pilot study was performed to see if the risk for cavities increases, decreases, or remains the same after eating raisins. They took 156 folks, swabbed their teeth, waited for the readings to get up over 1,500, which indicates high cavity-causing activity, and had half eat a little box of raisins and the other half eat nothing. In the eat-nothing control group, they started out at around 6,100 and, 15 minutes later, were still up at 6,100. The raisin group started around 5,950, but, after raisin consumption, their cavity risk score dropped down to 3,350. Although that’s a big reduction, note the score was still higher than the 1,500 cutoff, indicating they were still at risk—but the risk went down after eating raisins, not up. So, while raisins traditionally have been thought to promote tooth decay, current research suggests that raisins may not contribute to cavities after all—or at least not any more than other foods.


For more on raisins, see:

What about dried fruit in general? Check out:

To learn more about oral health, see:

In health,
Michael Greger, M.D.

PS: If you haven’t yet, you can subscribe to my free videos here and watch my live, year-in-review presentations:



from NutritionFacts.org https://ift.tt/2oxBBX6

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Botched Circumcision Leads to Penis Amputation for Baby Boy

From  cord blood banking  to  baby naming ceremonies , parents of newborns have a bevy of key decisions to make when it comes to medical procedures and religious and/or cultural practices. For instance, as soon as a couple learns they're having a boy, they might find themselves grappling with the  decision to circumcise—or not . It's an individual, personal decision for every family. Thankfully, when parents opt in, most circumcisions go off without a hitch. However, a shocking story out of Egypt highlights one instance in which the routine procedure went terribly awry. A father from Cairo is speaking out after his son's  penis had to be amputated following a botched circumcision . The Jerusalem Post  reported that the father named Ashraf Helmi says he took his child to Cairo to be vaccinated and was convinced by his sister-in-law and a family friend to have his  1-month-old son Mohamed circumcised during the same doctor's visit. According to  Me...

How Much Calcium do You Really Need

If your body does not receive enough calcium, it puts you at risk of osteoporosis and bone breakage. However, the amount of calcium required by your body largely depends on your age and gender. So, find out how much calcium you need. from Only My Health - Diet & Nutrition http://ift.tt/1tiyLxw

Reduce Acid-Forming Proteins to Protect Kidney Function

Chronic kidney disease is a major public health problem affecting about one in eight Americans, increasing the risks of disease and death even among those with only mild decreases in kidney function. Low-cost, low-risk preventive strategies that anyone can do are needed to address the epidemic of kidney disease. I discuss some of these in my video Protein Source: An Acid Test for Kidney Function . Diet plays a role in kidney function decline. “Specifically, diets higher in animal protein, animal fat, and cholesterol” may be associated with protein leakage into the urine, which is a sign of kidney damage, and, generally, “diets higher in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, but lower in meat and sweets, may be protective” against kidney function decline. In comparison to the diet eaten by our ancient ancestors, not only are we eating more saturated fat, sugar, and salt, we now also eat an acid-producing diet, as opposed to a base-producing, or alkaline, diet. Ancestral human diet...