Smoking and drinking directly passes foreign material through the oral cavity, generating adverse effects on your oral cavity. Alcohol is a desiccant (drying things up); heavy drinking dramatically decreases moisture needed to maintain a healthy oral cavity. A dry mouth increases one’s likelihood of developing tooth decay, gum disease, bad breath, fungal infection, burning sensations or soreness of the mouth. Alcohol’s acidic nature can also erode the enamel coating on a drinker’s teeth, leading to an increased chance of sensitivity and decay. Long-term contact with alcohol in the oral cavity has also been found to be possibly carcinogenic
A significant factor in the incidence of tooth decay in the United States is the consumption of suga...
Although pure ethanol has never been shown to be carcinogenic in laboratory experiments, alcoholic b...
Objective: To determine patterns of tobacco chewing, smoking and alcohol drinking in a sample of you...
Smoking and drinking directly passes foreign material through the oral cavity, generating adverse ef...
According to the World Health Organization there are almost two billion people worldwide who consume...
OBJECTIVE: alcohol abuse represents a risk factor for oral diseases, in particular, oral cancer. P...
This article will review the most recent literature on the effects of alcohol on the oral mucosa, an...
The effect of alcohol alone on the oral mucosa and its association with the development of oral canc...
OBJECTIVES The goal of the present study was to evaluate how the prolonged alcohol assumption in con...
A higher risk for the development of oral cancer was associated with heavy smoking and heavy drinkin...
Background: Recent studies have highlighted the role of alcohol as mouthwash antigens may lead to th...
Alcohol, particularly when associated with tobacco use, has been recognized as an important risk fac...
Worldwide, oral cancer represents approximately 5 per cent of all malignant lesions, with over 800 n...
Most mouthwashes contain alcohol, a known cause of head and neck cancer (oral cavity, pharynx, laryn...
Most mouthwashes contain alcohol, a known cause of head and neck cancer (oral cavity, pharynx, laryn...
A significant factor in the incidence of tooth decay in the United States is the consumption of suga...
Although pure ethanol has never been shown to be carcinogenic in laboratory experiments, alcoholic b...
Objective: To determine patterns of tobacco chewing, smoking and alcohol drinking in a sample of you...
Smoking and drinking directly passes foreign material through the oral cavity, generating adverse ef...
According to the World Health Organization there are almost two billion people worldwide who consume...
OBJECTIVE: alcohol abuse represents a risk factor for oral diseases, in particular, oral cancer. P...
This article will review the most recent literature on the effects of alcohol on the oral mucosa, an...
The effect of alcohol alone on the oral mucosa and its association with the development of oral canc...
OBJECTIVES The goal of the present study was to evaluate how the prolonged alcohol assumption in con...
A higher risk for the development of oral cancer was associated with heavy smoking and heavy drinkin...
Background: Recent studies have highlighted the role of alcohol as mouthwash antigens may lead to th...
Alcohol, particularly when associated with tobacco use, has been recognized as an important risk fac...
Worldwide, oral cancer represents approximately 5 per cent of all malignant lesions, with over 800 n...
Most mouthwashes contain alcohol, a known cause of head and neck cancer (oral cavity, pharynx, laryn...
Most mouthwashes contain alcohol, a known cause of head and neck cancer (oral cavity, pharynx, laryn...
A significant factor in the incidence of tooth decay in the United States is the consumption of suga...
Although pure ethanol has never been shown to be carcinogenic in laboratory experiments, alcoholic b...
Objective: To determine patterns of tobacco chewing, smoking and alcohol drinking in a sample of you...