• Best Practices New Normal
  • Digital Dentistry
  • Data Security
  • Implants
  • Catapult Education
  • COVID-19
  • Digital Imaging
  • Laser Dentistry
  • Restorative Dentistry
  • Cosmetic Dentistry
  • Periodontics
  • Oral Care
  • Evaluating Dental Materials
  • Cement and Adhesives
  • Equipment & Supplies
  • Ergonomics
  • Products
  • Dentures
  • Infection Control
  • Orthodontics
  • Technology
  • Techniques
  • Materials
  • Emerging Research
  • Pediatric Dentistry
  • Endodontics
  • Oral-Systemic Health

Dentistry and nutrition: How dairy is actually hurting your teeth and bones

Publication
Article
Modern Hygienistmodernhygienist.com-2014-11-01
Issue 11

More than 72% of calcium in the average American diet comes from dairy. Milk, yogurt, cheese, and whey protein are the more popular forms of dairy used in the United States.

More than 72% of calcium in the average American diet comes from dairy. Milk, yogurt, cheese, and whey protein are the more popular forms of dairy used in the United States.

The National Dairy Council works hard to convince us that their product helps us grow “strong teeth and bones,” though many people don’t realize that the calcium in dairy lowers the body’s pH balance and is difficult to digest and utilize, especially when pasteurized.

In order to stay healthy, the body wants to be at a pH balance of 7.4. Milk and milk products pull the pH balance down and cause the body to become more acidic. The more acidic the body, the higher the opportunity for infection, disease, and other problems.

When blood becomes acidic, the body fights to get back to a 7.4 pH balance. One of the resources the body uses to balance pH is calcium and, when needed, will leach the calcium out of bones and teeth, making them weaker. Of course, this is the exact opposite of why most people consume dairy products … for strong teeth and bones!

More health reading: The link between dental professionals and migraines

Easy-to-utilize calcium, which also raises pH levels, can be found in spinach, broccoli, collard greens, beet greens, mustard greens, bok choy, kale, oranges, sesame seeds, and many other veggies.

Our bodies were not designed to utilize milk after infancy and most people are unable to properly digest dairy after about the age of four. Nature intended cow’s milk to be used to quickly fatten up baby cows, not for humans to drink, process, or consume.

More health reading: What you and your patients need to know about e-cigarettes

Interestingly, a human is the only animal that utilizes milk after infancy and is also the only one that takes milk from another animal for its own consumption. Seriously, when was the last time you saw a goat getting its milk from a monkey or a rabbit from a bear? Right … it doesn’t happen because animals follow the laws of nature. Humans, however, we tend to follow the laws of consumer marketing.

To stay healthy, and to keep your teeth and bones strong, avoid dairy and products made from dairy. Switch to almond milk, coconut milk, or other non-dairy product and eat lots of leafy greens and plants to get your daily intake of easy-to-absorb calcium.

More health reading: What dental professionals need to know about their patients' marijuana usage

Editor's Note: References and citations available upon request.

About the author: Kirstin Carey, Certified Holistic Nutritionist is the original “Freak at the Table.” She loves to enlighten people on the joys of food, health, and nutrition, and finding which foods work best for their bodies, their goals, and their lives. This cheesesteak-eating, native Philadelphian used to hide her veggies in her napkin and hated anything that came from the sea. Now she’s a Certified Holistic Nutritionist, restaurant owner, and nutritional consultant living in Scottsdale, and has never been more healthy and balanced. Learn more about her at www.nourish123.com/about.

Related Videos
2024 Dental Products Report Spring Selection Bracket Reveal Video
Process of Care Workflow and Repairing Early Caries with Guided Enamel Remineralization
Addressing Unmet Needs in Early Childhood Oral Care - an interview with Ashlet Lerman, DDS
Mastermind Episode 33 – Charting the Course for the Future of Dentistry
CDS 2024 Midwinter Meeting – Interview with Debbie Zafiropoulos, who discusses a trio of new infection control products from Armis Biopharma.
2024 Chicago Dental Society Midwinter Meeting – Interview with Peter Maroon, business development and sales lead at Spectrum Solutions® on the new salivary diagnostic test, SimplyPERIO.
CDS 2024: Ivoclar's e.max ZirCAD Prime Blocks with Shashi Singhal, BDS, MS
CDS 2024: Diving Deep on J. Morita's New Root ZX3 & HF Module
CDS 2024: What's New at TAG University? with Andrew De la Rosa, DMD
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.