How saliva protects teeth — the work no one notices.
A litre and a half of saliva a day, doing chemistry no toothpaste can match. Why caring for it is half of caring for the mouth.
Photo: Fabian Reitmeier / PexelsThe mouth's most important hygiene product isn't sold in a tube. It's made by the body, about 1.5 litres a day, and most people never think about it until it stops working.
What saliva actually does
- Buffers acid. Bicarbonate in saliva neutralizes acids from food and bacteria within minutes. Without it, enamel pH would sit acidic for hours after every meal.
- Re-mineralizes enamel. Calcium and phosphate ions in saliva return to the enamel surface and rebuild the lattice that acid leached out.
- Mechanically clears food. Lubricates swallowing; flushes pigments and sugars from teeth.
- Antibacterial. Lysozyme, lactoferrin, IgA — saliva is part of immune defence.
- Taste perception depends on saliva dissolving food molecules. Try eating a dry cracker with a cotton-dry mouth.
What slows it down
- Mouth-breathing, especially at night
- Caffeine, alcohol, antihistamines, antidepressants, blood-pressure meds
- Stress — sympathetic activation shuts down salivary glands
- Smoking and vaping
- Cancer therapies affecting the salivary glands
- Age — flow drops modestly with decades
What dry mouth costs
Reduced flow = enamel sits in acid longer = cavities accelerate = breath worsens = sensitivity increases. The most under-diagnosed driver of "my whitening course didn't take" is chronic mild dehydration.
The first oral care product is a glass of water.
What helps
- Hydration. Two litres of plain water across the day. Boring; effective.
- Sugar-free xylitol gum. Twenty minutes of chewing nearly triples flow.
- Nasal breathing — see an ENT if you can't.
- Cheese, paneer, dairy — high in calcium phosphate; supports the re-mineralization saliva is trying to do.
- Avoid alcohol-based mouthwashes if you're already dry — they make it worse.
Connection to whitening
A well-hydrated mouth holds whitening better. The pellicle re-stabilizes faster, the enamel re-mineralizes between sessions, and sensitivity drops. Anyone planning a 14-day course should add 500 ml of water per day for the duration. Free protocol upgrade.
Persistent dry mouth — especially first thing in the morning despite good hydration — is worth a dental review. Underlying causes (medications, nighttime mouth-breathing, Sjogren's) deserve attention before any cosmetic regimen.
The mouth's first cleanser is its own.
Disclaimer. Editorial, not medical advice.