Snus does not cause teeth to fall out

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  • Sami123
    replied
    This snus and teeth falling off is big hoobla nowadays. Back in the old days snus contained small fractions of glass to get the snus directly to your blood stream and back then it ****ed everybodys teeth. Now the glass is gone and we can stop talking about this...

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  • prleLTD
    replied
    its ok !! I havent snused for 3 days and got a new roll yesterday so hehe

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  • prleLTD
    replied
    i dont know its exactly where i put my snus in . a friend suggested (also snuser) i should take a break and switch sides.Oh and thx for quick reply
    edit definitly not paranoia it moves for a few mm + i have almost no gum on theeese two tooth .

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  • timoteo
    replied
    The whole myth with the tooth loss is because american chewing tobacco and moist snuffs(dip) are full of sugar and chemicals, So american snuff only causes tooth loss. The ignorant government assumes snus is the same thing as dip, because there clueless, ignorant thoughtless, heartless and stubborn.

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  • timoteo
    replied
    I havent seen any stains on my teeth ever either, infact the baking soda in snus made them whiter.

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  • Mdisch
    replied
    Originally posted by prleLTD
    hey i dont know bout this,... im snusing around 3-4 months and 2 teeth where i put snus in are getting loose .i realy dont know ...
    This is either a coincidence or paranoia - as this study shows, Snus has no effect one loosening your teeth. I highly doubt that further snus use will have any effect on this, so snus away brother!

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  • prleLTD
    replied
    hey i dont know bout this,... im snusing around 3-4 months and 2 teeth where i put snus in are getting loose .i realy dont know ...

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  • heders
    replied
    It's fun how even Swedish doctors and anti-tobacco organizations have had this argument for such a long period of time even though they have had no proof of it what so ever. It's ridiculous. And most of them call they selves "experts" in the subject. Good to see they have busted the myth, even though it's an article on "Aftonbladet", the worst angled propaganda news paper in Sweden...

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  • Mr. Snuffleupagus
    replied
    Originally posted by bakerbarber
    Snus is like having a shot of 'Chuck Norris' injected directly into your arteries.

    It hardens you like steel and solidifies your core. It must be repeated at least once every four hours to sustain the effects.
    Chuck Norris lives in my beard and changes my prillas out at least every hour.

    Originally posted by lxskllr
    Here's the abstract. The full article is behind a paywall....



    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/1...749.x/abstract

    So smoking cures bad breath LOL!

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  • snusjus
    replied
    "relative to non-tobacco users, cigarette smokers had statistically significant less gingivitis"

    That's interesting. I figured smokers would have a higher incidence of gingivitis. Hell, I'm surprised smoking has a protective effect against it.

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  • lxskllr
    replied
    Here's the abstract. The full article is behind a paywall....

    Keywords:

    • epidemiology;
    • moist snuff;
    • periodontal disease;
    • periodontitis;
    • smokeless tobacco;
    • smoking;
    • snus;
    • tobacco



    Hugoson A, Rolandsson M. Periodontal disease in relation to smoking and the use of Swedish snus: epidemiological studies covering 20 years (1983–2003). J Clin Peridontol 2011; 38: 809–816. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-051X.2011.01749.x.


    Abstract

    Aim: The aim of the present study was to examine how deleterious current smoking and the use of Swedish moist snuff (snus) is for periodontal health compared with non-tobacco users.

    Materials and Methods: The studies comprised three epidemiological cross-sectional studies, in 1983, 1993 and 2003, of stratified random samples aged 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 and 70 years. The numbers of dentate participants were 550, 552 and 523, respectively. The participants were examined clinically and radiographically. Diagnostic criteria were the number of teeth, plaque, gingival status, probing pocket depth (PPD)4 mm, height of the alveolar bone level and classification by periodontal disease experience. In addition, participants were asked about their tobacco habits.

    Results: Multiple logistic regression shows, after adjusting for age, gender and sociodemographic variables, that relative to non-tobacco users, cigarette smokers had statistically significant less gingivitis, a higher frequency of PPD4 mm and a higher incidence of severe periodontitis. There was no significant association between gingivitis, frequency of PPD4 mm and periodontal disease experience and snus use.

    Conclusions: Cigarette smokers were found to have a statistically significant higher risk of severe periodontitis than non-tobacco users and users of snus. Using snus did not seem to be a risk factor for periodontitis.
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/1...749.x/abstract

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  • bakerbarber
    replied
    Snus is like having a shot of 'Chuck Norris' injected directly into your arteries.

    It hardens you like steel and solidifies your core. It must be repeated at least once every four hours to sustain the effects.

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  • lxskllr
    replied
    The OP is in English. You could poke around the university site for the original paper, but I'm guessing it's in Swedish even if it is available to outsiders.

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  • rkh3
    replied
    OK, thought so......

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  • rkh3
    replied
    Have a link to the article in English?

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