It is true that it is easy to bleed right after the tartar is removed.
If you rinse your mouth right after you remove the tartar, you may get some blood. Some people seem to be worried that their gums might have been damaged when they removed the tartar. It is certainly easy to bleed right after the tartar is removed, but it is not because of damage to the gums, but because of inflammation of the gums caused by the tartar.
If the tartar is attached to the tooth, the gums on the part are often already inflamed and can easily bleed with a slight stimulus. Especially when the tartar is deep inside the teeth and gums (the direction of the root of the teeth) or in large amounts, it may bleed temporarily even if you carefully remove the tartar.
It is wrong to say that every time you take a tartar, your teeth can be a little scratched.
There is no problem even if you remove the tartar regularly.
There are some people who are worried that their teeth will be cut off little by little if they use the tool to remove the tartar, but there is no need to worry.
Ultrasonic tartar removal, which is commonly used these days, only breaks and breaks the calcicated tartar by ultrasonic vibration on the tip of the chip. In general, even if you put it directly on your teeth, it’s not enough to scratch your teeth.
If you feel your teeth are getting smaller or have cracks after you remove the tartar, it’s a matter of the amount of tartar. If the tartar continues to adhere little by little over a long period of time and sticks in large quantities around the teeth, you can sensely assume that everything, including the tartar, is your teeth. If you remove all the tartar at once, you can feel as if the size of the tooth itself has changed, or if the tartar between the tooth and the tartar is removed, the original gap may appear, which can lead to a misunderstanding that it is ‘carved not only the tartar but also the tooth’.
It is true that even if you take a tartar on a regular basis, you will have cavities.
It is very important to take out your tartar regularly to maintain your teeth. Well, then. Can’t I get a cavity if I take out the tartar?
Tartar is made by calcicating a lump of bacteria attached to the tooth. Calcified bacteria are not active, so you can’t decay your teeth even with tartar attached.
The problem is not the calcified part of the tartar, but the rough part of the surface of the tartar. The tartar won’t make a hole in the tooth. Tooth removal is especially effective for preventing gum disease rather than cavity prevention.
It is recommended to remove tartar as regularly as possible to prevent gum disease and to maintain the environment in the mouth.