When candy and cocktails attack
Spooky smile risks
Halloween is a blast for adults — fun costumes, festive drinks, and sweet treats. But candy and cocktails can raise your oral health risks, and certain costumes might hurt your eyes, teeth, and gums. Understanding these hidden dangers helps you celebrate the spooky season safely.
Sweets and cocktails are party staples, but they feed oral bacteria and dry out your mouth.
Hard candies such as jawbreakers can strain your jaw joints, damage fillings and crowns, or chip your teeth.
Vampire fangs have a bit of a bite
Novelty fangs and teeth may complete your costume, but beware — they may bite back.
Plastic fangs and similar gear can rub against or cut your gums and trap food or bacteria against your teeth.
Keeping non-food items in your mouth can alter your bite, leading to jaw soreness, chipped teeth, or cracked fillings.
Be cautious with colored contacts
Colored lenses are certainly spooky, but not for the reasons you may think. Using non-prescription lenses that are not fitted by an optometrist can cause a lot of damage:
Non-prescription colored contacts can scratch the cornea, cause infections, and if worn for an extended periods of time, can even lead to blindness.
Decorative lenses often let in less oxygen, which can lead to dry eye, bacterial growth, or even a painful sore called a corneal ulceration.
If you plan to wear colored contacts, visit your optometrist for an eye exam and lens fitting before Halloween.
Make a healthy smile your everyday costume
Keep fright night fun and shield your smile and vision with these party-ready tips:
Indulge wisely when your sweet tooth strikes. Limit the sticky candies you consume and enjoy dark chocolate instead — it has less sugar than traditional chocolate, plus it provides fiber and antioxidants!
Don’t skip your oral health routine! Brush and floss before bed, especially if you’ve had candy and cocktails.
Enjoy all the haunted grins and eerie eyes this Halloween — just don’t let costumes, cocktails, and candy harm your oral or vision health!