This “opinion opener” was also taught by “Mystery” to contestants on VH1’s “The Pickup Artist”.
But seriously…
Today at the dentist the dental hygienist said it was better to floss after brushing. If you brush without rinsing it allows the floss to apply fluoride from the toothpaste into the hard to get areas in between the teeth.
Funny, because my wife flosses first, I after. And both follow with fluoride rinse.
My thinking was that flossing removed/loosened particles, after which the brush cleared them away. I’m eagerly awaiting the results of this thread - which I will either throw in my wife’s face as proof that my wisdom is never to be questioned (or which I will conveniently forget to ever mention.)
But it loosens the schmutz in spaces your toothbrush isn’t going to get in to clear away. Maybe a bristle here in there will work it’s way into spaces, but I doubt it’s to any significant degree, hence, the need for flossing.
But that small possibility is a pro to flossing first. The only negative I can see is that flossing first may force plaque down into the gum line that brushing may have brushed away (assuming there is more brushing going on between teeth than I believe there is).
Currently I’m flossing first pretty much out of habit, but I’ve been considering switching and thoroughly rinsing after flossing. Or even brushing, flossing, re-brushing. Yes, I have obsessed a bit about this.
This is the logic a always follow.
Also, it’s a matter of practicality. After a meaty meal, the first thing I usually do is grab a floss pick to get all those annoying pieces of meat stuck between my teeth. And while I’m at it, I just go ahead and floss the rest of my teeth. (Might as well.)
It won’t be till later in the evening, right before bedtime, that I brush my teeth.
Wait, so does OP have any cites to actual, y’know, scientific studies to give us statistics on how often the brush-then-floss people get laid, versus the floss-then-brush folks? :dubious:
Every time I’ve asked a dentist or oral hygienist the answer has boiled down to “I don’t care just so long as you do floss!” Apparently, getting people to floss regularly at all, regardless of whether before or after brushing, is much more of an issue than the before-or-after-brushing question.
I never really thought about this until now. I always brush, then floss, as I figured the floss would get the gunk the brush can’t reach. But I can see the advantage to doing it the other way too. The brush would get rid of the gunk you floss out. My dentist (who I am overdue for visiting) is just glad I do floss.