Bacteria That Cause Halitosis – Breath Odor
Halitosis is a certified condition and disease, classified by the World Health Organization (WHO) in a system that’s known around the world as the ICD code set, a code set used to categorize and classify diseases and physiological conditions.
Halitosis can range from an unpleasant feeling, to a downright uncomfortable, painful, and even fatally dangerous condition. The basis roots for the condition and the disease is the bacteria that live in our mouths. Bacteria are all around us, and in us. It’s in our gut; it’s on the keyboard we are using now. It’s in the air; it’s on the street; it’s on our clothes. Bacteria, in general are not deadly or necessarily threatening things, unless they reach a critical mass.
A fast and easy solution to halitosis involves a simple thing that you really should be doing during full brushings anyway, it is flossing. If you find that flossing with the traditional thread type of floss is hard to do, then you should consider the new sort of plastic fork type of flossing devices that are now sold at drugstores everywhere. These devices make it easy to apply downward or upward pressure between the farthest hard to reach teeth.
After flossing, make sure that you are not doing your final rinse out with an antiseptic mouth wash. It’s fine to do your preliminary rinse out with such a mouth wash, but after that antiseptic wash, you absolutely must do a plain vanilla, unheated, un-cooled tap water rinse a few times. However, if you do not rinse with regular tap water after the antiseptic wash, you will certainly swallow more than is allowed or suggested by the manufacturer. You really want to swallow the least amount of this detergent as possible.
For more information on halitosis – breath odor, please visit http://www.cleanbadbreath.com.







