Req 2a — Causes of Decay & Gum Disease
Remember those plaque-prone zones you marked on your molar drawing in Req 1? Now you are going to learn exactly what happens in those zones when plaque, sugar, and acid work together to attack your teeth.
The Decay Triangle
Dental decay is not caused by any single factor — it takes three things working together:
- Bacteria (in the form of plaque)
- Sugar (fuel for the bacteria)
- Acid (the waste product that eats through enamel)
Remove any one of these, and decay slows dramatically. Understanding how they interact is the key to prevention.
Bacterial Plaque — The Invisible Enemy
Your mouth is home to hundreds of species of bacteria. Most of them are harmless or even helpful. But some species — especially Streptococcus mutans — are cavity-causing specialists.
These bacteria form plaque, a sticky, colorless film that constantly builds up on your teeth. You cannot see fresh plaque, but you can feel it — run your tongue along your teeth when you first wake up, and that fuzzy feeling is plaque.
Here is what makes plaque dangerous:
- It sticks tightly to tooth surfaces, especially along the gumline and in the grooves of molars.
- It shelters bacteria from saliva, which would otherwise wash them away.
- If not removed by brushing and flossing, it hardens into tartar (calculus) within 24–48 hours. Tartar can only be removed by a dental professional.
Sugars — Fuel for the Fire
When you eat something sugary — candy, soda, fruit juice, even crackers and chips (which break down into sugars) — the bacteria in plaque have a feast. Streptococcus mutans and similar bacteria metabolize sugars as their energy source.
The problem is not just how much sugar you eat, but how often. Every time sugar enters your mouth, bacteria produce acid for about 20–30 minutes. Three pieces of candy eaten one after another cause one acid attack. Three pieces of candy eaten an hour apart cause three separate acid attacks. Sipping a sugary drink all afternoon is one of the worst things you can do for your teeth.
Foods that are particularly risky:
- Sticky sweets (caramel, gummy candy, dried fruit) — they cling to teeth and feed bacteria longer
- Acidic drinks (soda, sports drinks, juice) — they deliver both sugar and acid at the same time
- Starchy snacks (chips, crackers, bread) — starches break down into sugars in your mouth
Acid — The Destructor
When plaque bacteria digest sugar, they produce lactic acid as a waste product. This acid is what actually dissolves tooth enamel — the process called demineralization. Each acid attack lasts about 20–30 minutes before your saliva can neutralize the pH and begin repairing the damage.
The cycle works like this:
- You eat or drink something containing sugar.
- Plaque bacteria consume the sugar and produce acid.
- The acid lowers the pH on the tooth surface below 5.5 (the critical point for enamel).
- Enamel minerals (calcium and phosphate) dissolve out of the tooth surface.
- Saliva gradually neutralizes the acid and deposits minerals back — a process called remineralization.
If acid attacks happen faster than your saliva can repair the damage, a cavity forms. This is why frequent snacking is more damaging than occasional treats.

Gum Disease — When Plaque Attacks Below the Line
Plaque does not just cause cavities — it also causes gum disease (periodontal disease). When plaque builds up along the gumline, the bacteria irritate the gum tissue and trigger inflammation.
Stage 1: Gingivitis
The early stage of gum disease is called gingivitis. Signs include:
- Red, swollen, or puffy gums
- Gums that bleed when you brush or floss
- Bad breath that does not go away
The good news: gingivitis is completely reversible with better brushing, flossing, and professional cleanings. No permanent damage has occurred yet.
Stage 2: Periodontitis
If gingivitis is not treated, it can progress to periodontitis. The infection spreads below the gumline, and the bacteria begin destroying the periodontal ligament and alveolar bone — the very structures you labeled in your Req 1 drawing. Pockets form between the teeth and gums, trapping more bacteria. Eventually, teeth loosen and may fall out.
Periodontitis is the leading cause of tooth loss in adults, and the damage is not reversible — it can only be managed and slowed.

Breaking the Chain
Since decay requires all three factors (bacteria, sugar, acid), you can fight it by disrupting any part of the chain:
| Strategy | What It Disrupts |
|---|---|
| Brush twice daily + floss daily | Removes plaque before bacteria can produce acid |
| Limit sugary snacks and drinks | Reduces sugar available to bacteria |
| Use fluoride toothpaste | Strengthens enamel against acid attack |
| Drink water after eating | Rinses away sugar and helps neutralize acid |
| Chew sugar-free gum | Stimulates saliva, which neutralizes acid and aids remineralization |
| Regular dental cleanings | Removes tartar (hardened plaque) that brushing cannot reach |
You will learn more about fluoride’s protective role in Req 5.
NIDCR — Tooth Decay (Dental Caries) The National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research explains the science of tooth decay in plain language. Link: NIDCR — Tooth Decay (Dental Caries) — https://www.nidcr.nih.gov/health-info/tooth-decay