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As the candy bowls linger from Halloween and holiday treats are unwrapped, your teeth face a marathon of sugar exposure.
"Halloween involves a lot of candy all at once," Olga Ensz, D.M.D., M.P.H., told Fox News Digital.
A clinical associate professor and director of community-based outreach at the University of Florida College of Dentistry, Ensz said the problem isn’t that candy suddenly becomes more dangerous. Instead, "it’s that we eat it in much larger amounts over a short period."
SUGAR IN DRINKS LINKED TO HIGHER DIABETES RISK THAN THAT IN FOOD, NEW RESEARCH FINDS
That rapid-fire sugar intake fuels bacteria that feast on leftover candy, producing acid that weakens enamel and paves the way for cavities.
While brush

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