Bad Breath Can Usually Be Cured
Bad breath can usually be cured. Bad breath can be caused
by food rotting in the mouth, stomach acid regurgitating
up to the mouth and infections releasing chemicals that smell.
Your doctor should look for white dots on your tonsils, that
are often pieces of food that your saliva has turned white.
You can remove them by gargling after every meal or by rubbing
a Q tip against your tonsils.
If you have belching and burning in your chest or abdomen,
you may have acid backing up from your stomach. Your doctor
can order a blood test for helicobacter, the germ that causes
stomach ulcers. If it is positive, you can often be cured
by taking antibiotics (metronidazole or clarithromycin with
omeperazole) for one week. Even if the tests are negative,
I usually give my patients with symptoms of stomach distress
a trial with this treatment.
Another cause is an infection in your mouth, teeth, gums,
throat or esophagus. Your dentist should look for an infection
and order a throat culture. If it grows out bacteria that
cause disease, your doctor can cure you by prescribing the
appropriate antibiotic. However, more than 30 percent of
the time, the cultures do not grow out a bad germ, and you
still should be treated with antibiotics. There are so many
different germs in your mouth that it is impossible to tell
whether a germ that is found there is causing the odor or
is a normal inhabitant of your mouth. A pilocarpine pill
before each meal and chewing gum can increase saliva and
help wash down food before it is fermented in your mouth.
Check with your doctor.