Soft drinks – coffee – red wine – which drinks cause “teeth stains” the most?

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Soft drinks – coffee – red wine – which drinks cause “teeth stains” the most? Dentists reveal shocking answers!

Dentists are still shocked, recording a clip of themselves trying to soak their teeth in cola-coffee-red wine before revealing which drink causes the most “stains on teeth”?

Soft drinks - coffee - red wine -

Dr. Miles Madison, a dentist from Beverly Hills, California, posted a clip on TikTok showing the results of an experiment after dipping four extracted teeth in four different drinks: coffee, tea, cola, โปรโมชั่นพิเศษจาก UFABET สมัครตอนนี้ รับโบนัสทันที and red wine for 10 days, which shocked many social media users with the results.

Even Dr Miles said he was “unprepared” to see the severe effects of red wine on his teeth. As lifting his teeth from the glass showed they were almost entirely discoloured. The alcoholic beverage’s purple hue. “Red wine definitely stains the teeth the most. It stains the whole tooth. It discolours the enamel, the root, it discolours everything,” he said.

While a glass of cola can have a serious impact as well. It not only darkens the tooth’s surface. But also damages the tooth structure by creating small pits on the surface of the tooth due to the acidic properties of the carbonated drink. Which causes this abrasiveness. “Not only does cola darken the tooth’s surface. It also creates small pits because the acid erodes the enamel and the root part of the tooth,” he says .

For coffee, Dr. Madison showed that the enamel turned yellow and the roots of the teeth turned dark brown. “It’s much darker than it was before, especially the roots. Which don’t have as much minerals as enamel, so they’re more stained,” he said .

Finally, tea was the drink that stained the least, with the root of the tooth being found to turn a light brown. It was similar, but not as severe as coffee. “It stained the tooth just as well, but not as much as coffee. You could see that the root of the tooth was stained more than the enamel,” says Dr. Madison.