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Is Whitening the Right Way to Remove Brown Teeth Stains?

Posted on April 25, 2022 by AllSmiles.

Over the past two years, I began to get brown stains on my teeth that are increasing. I see my dentist twice yearly, and she notices the stains, too. My dentist recommends whitening my teeth, but neither of us knows what is causing the stains. My dentist says the source is probably not serious because I am in my 50s, and the stains are just developing. I asked my primary care doctor about the stains, and he told me to check with my dentist first. I feel like I am stuck in a loop. Yesterday, a friend mentioned that I could research dental bonding if whitening does not work. Should I let my dentist whiten my teeth or get a second opinion? Thank you. Omari from CT

Omari,

Thank you for your question.

We are unsure why your dentist has not tried to identify the cause of the stains and recommend treatment. But you can ask her what might be causing the stains to understand why she recommends whitening your teeth.

Types of Tooth Stains that Develop in Adults

When stains develop during adulthood, they are either internal or external stains.

  • Internal stains – Internal stains can form as your teeth absorb pigments from foods and drinks, such as tea or coffee. Internal stains are even in appearance and affect the entire teeth, and bleaching can break them down. Some prescription medications can cause external stains, too.
  • External stains – External stains appear around your gumline and between your teeth. Some toothpaste brands, such as Supersmile, remove the sticky film (protein pellicle) from your teeth and stains that stick to it. Also, Supersmile toothpaste works because it removes the protein pellicle on your teeth and the stains that adhere to it. Your dental hygienist can remove surface stains.

Identifying the Cause of Tooth Stains

Sometimes a health condition or medication can cause discoloration in teeth. Ask your dentist to review your medical and prescription histories. If neither health nor medication is a factor, your dentist’s recommendation makes sense.

Will You Need Teeth Bleaching or Dental Bonding?

Teeth bleaching gel applied to teeeth

A cosmetic dentist can identify the cause of, and treat, brown teeth stains

Whether a dentist uses teeth bleaching or dental bonding depends on the cause of the tooth stains. If your teeth stains come from coffee or tea, whitening from your dentist will break them down. Dental bonding is usually not necessary unless internal tooth stains develop from medication, fluorosis, or a medical condition.

Teeth whitening from a dentist is safe and can help your smile look younger. If your dentist is not willing to identify the cause of the stains, you can look for a dentist with cosmetic dentistry training to help you.

Lowell, Massachusetts, accredited cosmetic dentist, Dr. Michael Szarek, sponsors this post. His office is convenient to Andover, Dracut, Chelmsford, Tewksbury, and surrounding cities.

 

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How can I get coffee stains off my teeth?

Posted on March 29, 2021 by AllSmiles.

I have coffee stains on my teeth from drinking coffee since I was a teenager. My hygienist says they are intrinsic stains that require professional whitening. Is this true, or is there a toothpaste I can use to at least whiten my teeth a little? Will you please explain what intrinsic stains are? Thank you. Stacie from NH

Stacie,

Thank you for your question.

Intrinsic and extrinsic stains are textbook terms that a dentist would not use with a patient without an explanation. But your hygienist is correct—coffee stains are intrinsic. We will explain the terms.

Extrinsic tooth stains

Extrinsic, or external, tooth stains are on the surface of your teeth. If you smoke or chew tobacco, stains build up on your teeth. External factors cause extrinsic stains, and you can remove them with by brushing your teeth with whitening toothpaste or with a dental cleaning. But lingering extrinsic tooth stains can penetrate your teeth and become intrinsic.

Intrinsic tooth stains

Intrinsic, or internal, stains are embedded inside teeth beneath the enamel. Intrinsic stains take years to develop. Years of drinking coffee or tea or eating staining foods like dark berries, eventually penetrate the teeth. Although toothpaste will not remove stains beneath the tooth enamel, bleaching will remove them.

How to Remove Coffee Stains from Teeth

You can remove coffee stains from your teeth with professional bleaching gel. If you have been a coffee drinker for years, the stains are in your teeth, not simply on your teeth. The professional-strength gel that dentists use penetrates your teeth and releases oxygen bubbles to break down stains.

Does whitening toothpaste work on coffee stains?

Although whitening toothpaste will remove surface stains on teeth, it cannot remove coffee stains embedded beneath your tooth enamel for these reasons:

  • The whitening agent is not potent enough for internal stains
  • The toothpaste does not stay in contact with your teeth long enough to penetrate them
  • Coffee stains are deep in your teeth—beneath the enamel

You will need professional teeth whitening from a dentist or professional strength bleaching gel and custom trays to penetrate your teeth and break up coffee stains.

Why use custom teeth whitening trays for coffee stains?

Photo of teeth whitening trays in a case, for information on DIY teeth whitening from Lowell, MA dentist Dr. Michael Szarek.

Custom bleaching trays fit your teeth precisely

Custom bleaching trays are made after a dentist takes impressions of your teeth. The trays fit your teeth only, and no one else can wear them. When you put bleaching gel in custom trays, it is sealed against your teeth for deep penetration. The trays keep the gel in contact with your teeth to blast away coffee stains. The trays also keep bleaching gel away from your gums so it will not burn them. Over-the-counter teeth whitening trays do not fit your teeth as precisely, so whitening treatment is not as effective.

Endogenous stains

Endogenous stains begin within teeth that are developing during childhood. A skilled cosmetic dentist must examine endogenous stains to determine which cosmetic treatment is best for the stains.

  • Tetracycline – Tetracycline stains are endogenous. If a child takes the antibiotic tetracycline while permanent teeth are developing, the medication will darken teeth from the inside out. Tetracycline makes teeth turn brown.
  • Genetics – Some teeth have genetically dark pigmentation.
  • Fluorosis – If a child consumes too much fluoride while their teeth are developing, a blotchy color will dominate the teeth. Bleaching fluorosis stains will make matters worse. For details about fluorosis stains, read our post, My dentist can’t remove the brown stains on my teeth.

Best wishes for a brighter smile.

Michael Szarek, DMD, an accredited cosmetic dentist in Lowell, MA, sponsors this post.

 

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