Our mouth and teeth allow us to make different facial expressions, form words, eat, drink and start the digestion process. The mouth is essential for speaking. With your lips and tongue, your teeth help form words by controlling the flow of air out of your mouth. The mouth is an oval-shaped cavity inside the skull.
The two main functions of the mouth are eating and speaking. The parts of the mouth include the lips, vestibule, oral cavity, gums, teeth, hard and soft palate, tongue, and salivary glands. The mouth is also known as the oral cavity or oral cavity. Taking good care of your teeth and gums every day is an important way to prevent tooth decay and gum disease.
And finding and treating dental problems early leads to better oral health. Good oral health reduces risks related to diabetes, heart disease, cancer and chronic respiratory diseases. A healthy mouth can be a big advantage. Our teeth have a very important role to play in our lives.
They help us chew and digest food, they help us to speak and speak clearly, and they also shape our face. Saliva neutralizes acids in the mouth that break down tooth enamel by removing acidic residues from food. When acid damages enamel, saliva repairs the tooth's protective surface through a process called remineralization. The calcium, phosphorus, fluoride, and other minerals contained in saliva repair tooth enamel surfaces, keeping them healthy, strong, and resistant to tooth decay.
Usually red or yellow in color, mouth sores are painful sores that can appear inside the mouth and also on the outside of the lips. Remember that the pneumonia that kills older people usually comes from breathing through the mouth and inhaling or aspirating organisms from the mouth while they sleep and snore. Cancer treatments can cause dry mouth and more common things, such as dehydration, smoking, and mouth breathing.