Rancho Cucamonga Dentists

Learn About the Functions and Benefits of Saliva and Oral Health

Dentist Rancho Cucamonga CA

Your oral health and overall well-being are affected by salivary function. To maintain a healthy mouth without cavities and proper digestion, saliva production is essential.

Let’s talk about the functions and benefits of saliva. Also, what to do if your saliva is too high or low.

What is saliva?

The salivary glands of the mouth produce extracellular fluid called saliva, also known as “spit”. Saliva contains important enzymes that help to break down food particles. This is the first stage in the digestion process. Saliva also contains minerals and other nutrients that your teeth need to remineralize.

What is saliva made from? What is saliva made of?

Healthy saliva is slightly acidic and can range from 6-7 pH. This allows saliva to function properly and protect the mouth against bacteria buildup.

Your parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous system activity affects the viscosity of your saliva. Your saliva’s consistency changes when you go into “fight, flight or freeze” mode.

Saliva Functions

1. Clearing food debris

Saliva is responsible for removing food particles from the mouth. Good saliva flow means that food particles will not collect in your mouth or elsewhere in your oral cavity.

2. Tasting

Food molecules that have distinct flavor must be made more soluble or solubilized before they can taste food.

Your saliva interacts to the taste buds to reveal the different tastes of foods.

3. Begin the Digestive Process

Although chewing and swallowing start digestion, they are ineffective without saliva.

Your saliva binds food particles together to form a “bolus” which is a sticky substance that can easily get into your esophagus.

Amylase is a enzyme that breaks down food particles into simpler compounds. This is the first step in digesting food.

Saliva also protects your throat and esophagus against anything that could irritate or cause damage to their sensitive tissue.

Supporting the Oral Microbiome

Your saliva plays a crucial role in maintaining a healthy balance of good and bad microbes in the mouth.

Certain types of oral bacteria are destroyed by saliva’s macromolecule proteins and mucins. Mucins can be used to prevent bacteria (or fungi!) from attaching to surfaces in your mouth.

These functions are essential to maintain the oral biome and prevent pathogens (cavity-causing or “cariogenic”) from taking control of the mouth.

Lubricating the Mouth

The seromucous covering of saliva is called saliva. It acts as a barrier between your oral mucosa, and any foreign material that may enter your mouth. These surfaces are lubricated by saliva, which is one of the most important functions of saliva.

Saliva lubricates your mouth and prevents irritation to your tongue, gums or cheeks.

Protects against the effects of saliva

The oral mucosa lubricates the saliva, which allows you to speak.

Buffering Acids

The saliva removes food particles that could feed bacteria and cause tooth decay (tooth caries), but it also buffers acids which can damage tooth enamel.

These compounds help to provide a buffer for your teeth:

Particularly, bicarbonate spreads into oral plaque, neutralizing acids. Bicarbonate can also form ammonia which is an additional buffer to neutralize acids.

When saliva flows at a very low rate, this buffering function is nearly nonexistent. This is also known as “unstimulated saliva”.

Low salivary flow rates can lead to side effects like dry lips (xerostomia), which includes an increased chance of developing cavities.

Keep your teeth strong

Saliva helps maintain your teeth’s strength by supporting remineralization, which is part of protecting teeth against cavities.

Every day, your teeth are being remineralized or demineralized. A good salivary flow and pH of 6-7 allows saliva to deliver minerals to your enamel while protecting it from acid damage.

Recognizing Systemic Health Problems

The presence or risk of disease can be identified by the salivary proteins and DNA.

Your saliva could predict or diagnose the following conditions:

How your mouth produces saliva

Through cell clusters known as acini, salivary glands secrete and produce saliva. Acini secrete fluid which collects in ducts and optimizes the balance of saliva compounds.

These small ducts are located in the salivary glands. They all flow into larger ducts, and then join together to form a single duct. This is the duct that sends 90% of your spit to your mouth.

Each side of your mouth has major salivary glands.

A small amount of saliva is produced without any external factors at all. Additional saliva is produced when

How to maintain healthy saliva

To ensure your saliva is healthy and produces at a high level:

Is saliva able to cause tooth decay? The theory is that saliva loss can cause tooth damage.

Low saliva flow is likely if you sleep with your mouth closed, suffer from Sjogren’s syndrome or are taking medications that cause dry lips.

Slow saliva flow at night can lead to cavities, and possibly other issues such as gum disease or sensitive teeth .

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