I was just given a Water Pik. Is there any point to these things? According to the chart on the box, it is like a hundred times better than brushing and flossing. Is there any research that wasn’t done by Water Pik that says these work?
My dental hygienist recommended them as a supplement (but not a replacement) to brushing and flossing.
Here’s a tip: start at a relatively low pressure and work your way up to a moderate pressure. If you start at the highest pressure, it will hurt and cause your gums to bleed.
OTOH my dentist (and the one before him, and the one before him) all strongly recommended that I not use one, because it can open the space between the gum and tooth, exposing the softer parts of the tooth and making it easier for food to get trapped in the space.
They all said that, after brushing, the single best thing for my teeth is a good flossing.
I don’t know how good they are, but I always found that the pain of using them killed the supposed benefit of them, especially when compared to good flossing and brushing with a ‘sonic’ type toothbrush. In other words, if my daily regimen of tooth care isn’t getting me there, a water-pic isn’t either.
They’re strongly recommended if you have dental implants. Otherwise, you run the risk of the implants getting infected . . . which can cause them to fail.
My wife’s dentist (who is also my dentist) recommended that she get one. She did and now we both use it probably 3x/week. As others have said, start out on a low setting and work your way up- we stopped at around 5.5 out of 10. I can’t imagine what 10 feels like, probably like being repeatedly poked in the gums by a novocaine needle.
I’m terrible in that I don’t floss, but I never have any cavities either. So I feel like I’m ahead of the game if I use the Waterpik. It gets little bits of food that brushing (with a Sonicare) doesn’t get.
I’m not sure what’s meant by the comment about being bacteria farms, though. All it does is pump clean water through the nozzle.
Water picks are not designed for the health of your teeth, they are designed for the health of your gums.
By age 40 virtually every American suffers from gum disease, it really is a problem in America.
As long as the water pick is used with brushing and floss it’ll keep your gums strong. Plus if you have bad breath or a bad taste in your mouth, throw a cup full of mouthwash into the water. It works wonders.
Also you can really entertain a cat for hours with those things
Wow, how same-boatish. I made it to 40 without cavities and with mediocre dental habits (brush often, but never floss and just started going to the dentist again after a 15-year break). Big fan of the Sonicare.
You’re saying the Waterpik finds a lot that it doesn’t?
This. I had some persistent pockets in my gums that just didn’t seem to want to go away, until I started using a water pick. Once I started doing that, the pockets went away quickly. Just in time for my first visit to the periodontist, who took a look at my gums and said, to my great relief, that my gums looked OK (for now).
Not sure what “a lot” means to you, but every time I use it there are a couple pieces of detritus (dentritus, if you will) laying in the sink that make me go “ewwww…”.