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waterpik vs floss effectiveness at removing plaque?

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2016 2:42 am
by scopus
hey what can i say im lazy and hattte flossing, like most ppl. and esp with braces takes so much time and effort, so wondering if i should buy waterpik and stop flossing all together. After researching theres 2 schools of thought, one that waterpik is more effective at removing plaque and 2 that it is not and is not a substitute, that it "doesnt remove plaque like floss does because effective flossing literally "wipes" the sticky plaque off teeth and Waterpiks can only "rinse" these areas" but is useful for removing food particles. Now i see theres some studies that show that waterpik is more effective than regular floss at removing plaque and they market it as so, but lots of ppl here and other places including dentists, hygenists...say it is not a replacement but a good addition. Im confused! :? if theres studies that say it is more effective why are people still saying it is not a substitute? are they just old school types cant get with the times or is there truth behind it? thoughts?..

Re: waterpik vs floss effectiveness at removing plaque?

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2016 2:14 pm
by EWUgal15
Plaque is actually very soft and it doesn't take much to get it off your teeth. I use floss in conjunction with a WaterPik. I feel the floss gets under the gum line better while the WaterPik does well to rinse chunks out from around my brackets and under my wires.

Re: waterpik vs floss effectiveness at removing plaque?

Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2016 11:10 am
by JCloNY
This is a great question. I'm interested in hearing the thoughts of others on this topic. Just trying to determine if I should continue to try to floss with floss for braces of if I should make the investment into a waterpik

Re: waterpik vs floss effectiveness at removing plaque?

Posted: Sun Apr 03, 2016 8:59 am
by iob
I asked myself the same question after I added up the time that it took to do the whole routine of water pic'ing, flossing, brushing. I found several credible articles that made feel better about relying mostly on the water flosser, though I still try to floss a couple times a week...just to be sure. Here's one that's more "plain English" than some academic pieces: https://www.adha.org/resources-docs/712 ... gation.pdf

Re: waterpik vs floss effectiveness at removing plaque?

Posted: Sun Apr 03, 2016 1:46 pm
by JCloNY
iob wrote:I asked myself the same question after I added up the time that it took to do the whole routine of water pic'ing, flossing, brushing. I found several credible articles that made feel better about relying mostly on the water flosser, though I still try to floss a couple times a week...just to be sure. Here's one that's more "plain English" than some academic pieces: https://www.adha.org/resources-docs/712 ... gation.pdf

I am leaning towards using the Waterpik everyday and using floss a few times a week. I'm sure with practice it will get easier but with how close my teeth are it is a pain to use regular (or super floss). Pre-braces I used floss picks every night religiously.

Re: waterpik vs floss effectiveness at removing plaque?

Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2018 11:57 pm
by spacey8008
[quote=scopus post_id=474772 time=1453455747 user_id=26166]
hey what can i say im lazy and hattte flossing, like most ppl. and esp with braces takes so much time and effort, so wondering if i should buy waterpik and stop flossing all together. After researching theres 2 schools of thought, one that waterpik is more effective at removing plaque and 2 that it is not and is not a substitute, that it "doesnt remove plaque like floss does because effective flossing literally "wipes" the sticky plaque off teeth and Waterpiks can only "rinse" these areas" but is useful for removing food particles. Now i see theres some studies that show that waterpik is more effective than regular floss at removing plaque and they market it as so, but lots of ppl here and other places including dentists, hygenists...say it is not a replacement but a good addition. Im confused! :? if theres studies that say it is more effective why are people still saying it is not a substitute? are they just old school types cant get with the times or is there truth behind it? thoughts?..
[/quote]
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