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Many teenagers need braces to fix crowded or crooked teeth and jawbones that don’t meet properly.
Although as a teenager, you may have been wearing your braces for a while already, it’s a good idea to brush up on how to look after them – and your teeth – properly. Plus, once your permanent braces have been taken off, it is likely that you will need to wear a retainer (removable brace) at night for a while, to help make sure that your teeth stay in the right position.
How long you need to wear braces depends on three key things:
When wearing a brace, you have to be careful with the foods you eat and you'll have to spend a few extra minutes cleaning your braces each day and after meals. But you’ll still be able to sing, play a musical instrument, smile, play sports (though you will need a mouthguard for some sports) and of course, kiss. Your friends will get used to you having braces more quickly than you think
If you have a new brace, although actually having the brace fitted should not be painful, it will take a few days to get used to wearing it. This is the time when mouth ulcers and sore spots are most likely to develop, as your brace rubs against your cheeks, lips and gums.
If you have been wearing your fitted brace for a while, you’ll know that your orthodontist will need to check your braces every 6–8 weeks, to replace worn-out rubber bands, check on the progress of your teeth, and make adjustments to the wires to make sure your teeth are being pulled in the right direction. Mouth ulcers may also occur after these adjustments have taken place.
A mouth ulcer is:
Most mouth ulcers appear on the:
If any parts of your brace are causing you pain and discomfort, you may want to try using a painkiller such as ibuprofen or paracetamol for a day or two. If you’re getting sore spots and mouth ulcers too, the dentist or orthodontist can give you some clear wax to place over the part of the brace that is causing the problem.
You can also use a mouth ulcer gel at any time of the day or night (but no more than every 3 hours) or a weak solution of warm salt water (1/2 teaspoon of salt per cup of water) may help to ease the irritation.
The main goals for treating your mouth ulcer are to relieve your pain, reduce inflammation and help fight infection. There are three products in the bonjela range, designed to help relieve mouth ulcers. They are all suitable for people over the age of 16.
Bonjela Adult – sugar-free, clear, almost colourless, aniseed-flavoured gel for the relief of pain, discomfort and inflammation caused by common mouth ulcers and cold sores. It helps to fight minor mouth infection and aid healing of sore spots and ulcers due to dentures and braces.
(Medicine for adults over the age of 16)
Always read the label.
Bonjela Cool Mint Gel– sugar-free mint-flavoured gel for the relief of pain, discomfort and inflammation caused by common mouth ulcers and cold sores. It helps to fight minor mouth infection and aid healing of sore spots and ulcers due to dentures and braces.
(Medicine for adults over the age of 16)
Always read the label.
Bonjela Complete Plus – for the treatment of 1 to 2 minor mouth ulcers ONLY (<1cm) as well as small wounds of the oral cavity. It is a gel which once applied in the mouth forms a fine and soft film which is intended to protect the wound from external things such as food, soothe pain and aid healing.
(Medical device for adults over the age of 16)
Always read the label and instructions.
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