Living with Braces:FAQs and Tip

Living with braces requires adjustments, but with proper care, the experience is manageable. Common FAQs include brushing techniques, dietary restrictions, and tips for managing discomfort, ensuring a smooth orthodontic journey. Greater Northwest Orthodontics provides exceptional care for patients in Issaquah, Washington, and surrounding areas. We are here to help you achieve the smile of your dreams and answer any questions you may have along the way.

young teenage girl smiling with braces on teeth, blurry background

Brushing and Flossing with Braces

Maintaining good oral hygiene is essential when you have braces. Brushing with braces requires extra care to ensure food particles and plaque don’t accumulate around the brackets and wires. Use a soft-bristled toothbrush and fluoride toothpaste to brush at a 45-degree angle around the braces.

Flossing can be tricky with braces, but using a floss threader or orthodontic floss will help reach between the teeth and around the braces. Daily brushing and flossing are crucial to prevent tooth decay and gum disease during orthodontic treatment.

Foods to Eat and Avoid with Braces

When wearing braces, it’s important to choose the right foods to protect your orthodontic treatment. Soft foods such as yogurt, scrambled eggs, pasta, and mashed potatoes are great options. Avoid sticky, hard, and chewy foods that can damage brackets and wires. This includes items like caramel, gum, nuts, and popcorn. Crunchy fruits and vegetables, like apples and carrots, should be cut into small pieces before eating to minimize pressure on your braces.

Sports and Braces

If you’re active in sports while wearing braces, it’s essential to take extra precautions to protect your teeth and orthodontic appliances. A mouthguard is highly recommended during any physical activity. Wearing a mouthguard helps prevent damage to your braces and protects your lips, cheeks, and gums from injury during contact sports.

Contact Us to Learn More & Get Answers to Common FAQs

At Greater Northwest Orthodontics, we proudly help patients in Issaquah, WA, and surrounding areas. To get started on your orthodontic journey, contact our team. Here, we dive into some frequently asked questions:

We think you’ll be relieved to know that getting braces does not hurt! When we place your braces on, we are simply bonding brackets to your teeth, and attaching your archwires to your brackets. This won’t cause you any pain. 

The first week you have braces, you may experience some minor soreness as your teeth and gums are adjusting to the support of your braces. You can take some Tylenol® or another over-the-counter pain reliever to counteract the soreness. This should subside after the first week or two.

Yes! We’re proud to offer Same Day Braces, so you can leave your first appointment with braces on your teeth. Once you decide to transform your smile, why wait any longer to get started? 

When new patients ask, “can you get molds/impressions and braces on the same day?” – they’re pleased to know that we can do it all at your complimentary consultation! We’ll examine your teeth, create your personalized treatment plan, create a custom financial plan, then place your braces.

This will depend on a few factors, including your goals and the outcome you desire from treatment, your overall oral health, your orthodontic condition, the severity of your case, and your diligence in following directions and wearing your appliances (like rubber bands). 

On average, treatment with Invisalign®, traditional braces and ceramic braces can take anywhere from 12 to 36 months, although in some cases may be longer or shorter.

Once your orthodontist completes your complimentary consultation, we’ll have an estimate of how long your treatment period will be. The length of your treatment may change, depending on how quickly your teeth are shifting and whether you wear your appliances as instructed.

Yes, your orthodontic treatment won’t stop you from living your life the way you want to! As long as you wear a mouthguard when playing sports, you shouldn’t have to sit on the sidelines during the season. 

No matter which type of braces you choose, it’s incredibly important that you wear a mouthguard while playing sports. A mouthguard will protect your cheeks, gums, teeth and other players from damage.

You can still eat at your favorite restaurants in Issaquah! You’ll be able to eat tons of delicious snacks, meals and desserts with braces too. During the first week of your treatment, as your teeth and gums are adjusting, you may want to choose softer foods, like pasta, tuna, mashed potatoes, or soup. 

Knowing what to eat your first week with braces takes some of your own discretion. You can integrate harder foods into your diet as soon as you’re feeling up to it.

Here’s a list of foods you can eat with braces:

  • Dairy — cream cheese, pudding, milk
  • Breads — tortillas, pancakes, muffins, 
  • Grains — pasta, rice, cereal
  • Meats — soft chicken, soft meatballs, lunch meats
  • Vegetables — cooked carrots, peas, beans
  • Fruits — bananas, kiwis, strawberries, grapes
  • Treats — ice cream (no nuts), milkshakes, Jell-O, frozen yogurt

As a general rule of thumb, try to avoid foods that are considerably chewy, sticky, crunchy, or hard. These food items are infamous for damaging brackets and wires and breaking orthodontic appliances.

Chewy, sticky foods can stick to your wires and pull them out of place. Hard foods can pop your wires out of place or break a bracket. Next thing you know, you’re visiting us for an emergency orthodontist appointment! As much as we’d love to see you, we want to keep your treatment on track. 

Here are some examples of foods to avoid when wearing braces:

  • Chewy foods — bagels, hard bread rolls, Twizzlers
  • Crunchy foods — popcorn, ice, dried fruits, Cheetos, Doritos
  • Sticky foods — caramel, gum, Laffy Taffy, Starburst
  • Hard foods — nuts, Jolly Ranchers, hard pizza crusts, Nerds
  • Foods that require biting — corn on the cob, apples, carrots

As weird as this sensation may be, this is normal! Your teeth and gums are adjusting to your braces. The whole point of your treatment is to shift your teeth into alignment, and with this shifting comes some minor tooth wiggling.

Toward the end of your treatment, once your teeth have shifted into the desired position and you enter the retention phase, your teeth will stabilize and stop wiggling. 

If any of your teeth are wiggling considerably and it concerns you, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us! We want to calm your fears and ensure that you’re working toward the best possible results from your treatment.

Brushing and flossing around brackets and wires can be challenging if you aren’t sure how to get started. When you get your braces on, Dr. Pawar will show you how to properly brush and floss your teeth! 

Maintaining your oral hygiene is especially important during you or your child’s orthodontic treatment. If you don’t brush and floss regularly, bacteria can grow between your teeth and around your brackets and archwires, causing permanent stains, cavities, or gum disease. 

Here’s how to properly brush your teeth with braces: 

1. Brush the outside and inside of your teeth, as well as the chewing surface and gumline. 

2. Brush in small circles to reach between your archwires and around the corners of your brackets. 

3. Make sure you’re brushing thoroughly, but gently enough to avoid damaging your braces. 

When flossing between your teeth, we recommend using a specialized flossing threader that allows you to insert the floss thread between your teeth and braces. Specialized flossing threaders have a solid end that makes it easier to push the floss through the archwires.

We won’t know whether you require rubber bands until you visit us for your complimentary consultation. Some patients need rubber bands to align their bite, while other patients don’t. It all depends on your unique case!

Elastics, or rubber bands, are one of the most common appliances used during treatment with braces. Elastics are hooked around a bracket on the top teeth and a bracket on the bottom teeth to exert persistent (but gentle) force. Over time, this force aligns the teeth and jaw bones and treats malocclusions (poor bite conditions), like overbites, underbites, cross bites, and open bites.

Orthodontic wax is used in the case of minor orthodontic emergencies. If a wire pops loose, or a bracket is irritating your cheeks, orthodontic wax can be applied to the bracket or poking wire to provide temporary relief until you’re able to visit us.  

To apply orthodontic wax, you’ll wash your hands, then pinch off a small piece of wax. You’ll roll this piece into a ball, then apply it to the DRY wire or bracket. Squeeze the wax into place to make sure it doesn’t fall off, then run your tongue over the wax to feel for any looseness. If there is too much saliva upon placement, the wax will not stay attached well. 

Be sure to give us a call so we can get your braces fixed at your next appointment!

It’s normal to experience soreness after getting braces or adjustments. To ease discomfort, over-the-counter pain relievers can help, and rinsing with warm salt water may soothe sore areas. Soft foods are also easier on your teeth during this period. 

Orthodontic wax can be applied to brackets or wires that irritate the inside of your mouth. Simply pinch off a small amount and press it onto the area causing discomfort for immediate relief. 

If a bracket or wire breaks, cover it with orthodontic wax and contact your orthodontist for repair. Avoid adjusting it yourself.

Have questions about life with braces?

Please don’t hesitate to reach out to us with any questions.

Dr. Tripti Pawar and our experienced team are here to guide you and support you along your treatment process, while you achieve the perfect smile.

Ready to get started? Request your complimentary consultation at our conveniently located orthodontist office in Issaquah today!