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HOW TO CURE BAD BREATH : TYPE 1 HALITOSIS
How To Cure Bad Breath Through Classification
Definition of Type 1 Halitosis
Because the causes of halitosis can greatly vary from one person to the next, the search for the underlying source of bad breath is often considered a quest in itself. For this reason, a comprehensive classification system for all the possible causes for bad breath is an absolutely necessity in order to learn how to cure bad breath.
Micro-Biologist and halitosis expert,
Dr Murat Aydin
has come up with a clear and precise classification method that significantly simplifies the search for the source of the problem and ultimately helps find a definite cure for this disease.
All the possible causes of halitosis can be broadly summarized into five easy to understand categories. Within each category, there are more specific sub-categories. Let’s begin with the first and most common type of bad breath:
Type 1 Halitosis, technically known as Fetor Oris
Sub-Category 1 - Benign Bad Breath.
This type of halitosis is simply caused by poor oral hygiene and can be easily cured with better brushing and flossing habits. It is not a condition nor a disease, but a state that directly results from the proliferation of bacteria and the decaying effects that they cause in the oral cavity. This kind of bad breath include cavities, bio-film formation, and bacterial overgrowth.
How To Cure Bad Breath, Gum Diseases
Sub-Category 2 – Benign Bad Breath That Has Degenerated And Become A Chronic Condition.
This halitosis category is directly caused by neglected oral hygiene over long periods of time. Gum diseases such as gingivitis that is usually benign and reversible can degenerate into more severe and complicated conditions when left unchecked.
The usual result of deteriorated gingivitis is periodontal disease. The problem with this advanced state of gum disease is that it is not reversible and can further degenerate into serious systemic diseases (heart disease, diabetes, lung infections, etc). Treating bad breath caused by periodontal disease often requires surgery.
Sub-Category 3 – Bacterial Imbalance
Here is a serious condition that cannot be treated with conventional methods simply because regular brushing and flossing will have little to no effect. In most cases, the bacterial imbalance happen in hard to reach areas of the mouth such as in between teeth, bellow the gum line, inside biofilm formations.
Food residue and mucus is ingested and turned into an aromatic gaseous waste called volatile sulfur compound (VSC) by anaerobic bacteria. Because regular tongue scrapers and toothbrushes cannot possibly reach inside and around these hard to reach areas of the mouth, conventional oral hygiene will do nothing to dislodge and destroy the bad breath causing bacteria.
To treat the bacterial imbalance of the oral flora, a much more specialized approach with specific tools is necessary to learn how to
cure bad breath.
Sub-Category 4 – Other Tongue Disorders
Such disorders include bacterial imbalance on the
back of the tongue, black tongue/ black hairy tongue
and geographic tongue. Black tongue also known as brown tongue can be defined by an overgrowth of the tongue’s papillae. This over growth gives the impression of a fur like formation on the tongue’s surface trapping bacteria and food debris in the process.
Although a rare condition, products such as Pepto Bismal and an abusive use of hydrogen peroxide have been known to cause this condition.