The Bossticks - Dr. Sam Saleh - How Oral Health Impacts Your Overall Health & Aesthetic Dentistry Advice
Episode Date: June 26, 2024#718: Today we're sitting down with Dr. Sam Saleh. Dr. Sam Saleh is a world-renowned facial aesthetic dentist sought after for his signature treatment techniques, including minimal preparation restora...tions, attracting patients globally, including high-profile individuals and celebrities. He joins us to discuss all things oral health, aesthetic dentistry, and how to have a healthy oral microbiome. To connect with Dr. Sam Saleh click HERE To connect with Lauryn Bosstick click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE To Watch the Show click HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential Head to the HIM & HER Show ShopMy page HERE to find all of Michael and Lauryn's favorite products mentioned on their latest episodes. This episode is brought to you by ServPro SERVPRO can make any size disaster look like it never happened. Visit SERVPRO.com or call 1-800-SERVPRO today. This episode is brought to you by CORT Furniture Build your own furniture rental package today at cort.com/podcast This episode is brought to you by LMNT LMNT is a tasty electrolyte drink that has everything you need and nothing you don't. It contains a science-backed electrolyte ratio: 1000mg sodium, 200mg potassium, and 60mg magnesium. Get a free sample pack with any purchase at drinkLMNT.com/SKINNY This episode is brought to you by Equip Foods Go to equipfoods.com/skinny or use code SKINNY at checkout to receive 20% off your order. This episode is brought to you by Sunday Lawn Care Sunday is available at Target, Walmart, and Lowe's stores nationwide. Use code SKINNY20 for 20% off your custom lawn plan on getsunday.com This episode is brought to you by The Farmer's Dog It's never been easier to invest in your dog's health with fresh food. Get 50% off your first box & free shipping by going to thefarmersdog.com/skinny Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a dear media production.
She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Fantastic.
And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie.
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her.
Well, your mouth is such an important part in your body, right?
That's how you eat, right?
you breathe through your mouth. So it's such an important portal. So keeping your mouth healthy
is not just health of, you know, it's not just oral health care that we're talking about here. It's
general well-being. You know, reducing bacteria levels. There are stress hormones that can come into
your mouth and reducing those stress hormones by having very good oral hygiene can actually help you
with sleep. So it's, it has a lot of systemic effects. There are conditions of the heart that can be
affected by having high levels of bacteria and your blood levels. So you've really, you know,
you've kind of got to look at the mouth as a very important place from where your general
health starts. And it's just, it's crucial. Today we're talking all things mouth. Teeth, tongue,
flossing, veneers, aesthetics, what looks youthful in the mouse, how everything plays a role on
your face according to your mouth, oral hygiene, the best way to brush.
your teeth, mouth breathing, nose breathing, and everything. And we're covering it with my world
renowned facial aesthetic dentist, okay? So Michael had gone to him forever. I actually was recommended
to this dentist by Doreet of Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. And Michael, like, loved him so
much. He thought he was amazing and incredible and just so talented when it came to aesthetics and
teeth and teeth cleaning and just all things. And so I started going to Dr. Sam. I fell in love with
him not only as one of the best dentist in the world, but also as a person. He has so many
incredible tips that a lot of people just don't know, things that I was blown away about.
Dr. Sam Salae is a pioneer in conservative dentistry practicing in both London, UK, and Beverly
Hills. And let me tell you, he is like the secret to celebrity dentist.
There are so many people that go to him. He's very humble about it and you're not going to see it all over his Instagram, but he is a secret in the celebrity and influencer world. And he just knows what he's doing when it comes to facial aesthetic. Whether it's veneers or for me, I did a mouthguard with him to make sure I was protecting my teeth from grinding or whitening your teeth. He does amazing whitening, like the best you've ever seen. Or teaching you how to floss or brush. He just knows.
his shit when it comes to dentistry and aesthetics. And I think that if anyone is out there who is
listening, who's thinking about anything aesthetic, whether it's whitening or a mouthguard or veneers,
you guys should message him on Instagram because he does the best smile makeovers, whether you have
real teeth, fake teeth, chip teeth, whatever it is, he is going to make sure that your teeth
look at the absolute best. You should also know that he has a form.
pulling rinse oil that I use. I've used it forever. So does Michael. And we get into that. And I
asked him a bunch of questions about oil pulling and the do's and don'ts. I think you're going to like
this episode because everyone who's listening has a mouth and you should know everything to know about
the mouth because your mouth is like a resume. You walk into a room, you smile, you talk with it.
It's really important to your day to day, obviously. I am someone who had horrible, horrific,
multiple hour surgery years ago.
And so my mouth has always been like a tender spot for me.
And he's worked really well with me to make sure I'm comfortable going to the dentist.
And I go to him every three months to get a teeth cleaning.
On that note, let me introduce you to the most exceptional dentist, I think, in the world, Dr.
Sam Saleh.
This is the skinny confidential, him and her.
We have Dr. Sam, a facial estuary.
aesthetic dentist from Beverly Hills in London in studio today. I am so excited because you are our personal dentist too. So I feel like this episode has a lot of personality to it because we know you so well.
Maybe the best looking dentist I've ever seen, huh?
He is. Go Google him, guys. Don't get excited. He's married. Dr. Sam, welcome to the show.
Thank you so much. It's so wonderful to see you both outside of my dental chair.
Yes, our sparkly team. I'm not going to lie.
I do feel, listen, I love your dental chair.
I feel like I'm going to a spaceship every time I go into your office.
But I do like, maybe I like this setting a little more.
Yeah, well, you guys are in the position of power now.
Now I know what my patients feel like.
You don't have, yeah, it's a little intimidating sitting in front of this microphone.
Yeah, you don't have a pick in my mouth.
Right?
It's like one of those things that holds my mouth wide open.
I feel I wish I brought one of my syringes with me, actually,
because then I feel like I have a bit more ammo right now.
You guys have way too much power.
I feel like I'm, yeah, this is intense.
I actually found you as a dentist because I was watching Real Housewives and I saw Doreet come to your office.
And I was like, her teeth are so beautiful.
Like who does her teeth?
Who cleans her teeth?
All the things.
And I sought you out.
And then I made Michael.
I was like, get on into the dentist.
You know, that happens a lot.
We get a lot of husbands and wives.
And, you know, there's always the guinea pig.
So somebody will come first and they try it out.
And then the other one gets, you know, really jealous.
And they're like, okay, when can I get in?
I need to get in yesterday.
Yep.
So we do have a lot of that.
Well, you know, I think a lot of people have had traumatic experience with dentists.
And it's a lot of people get nervous and scared.
But what I found when I came into your practice was like, it's a very calm environment.
Your people, the team you work with is so great.
Thank you.
It's always so comfortable.
Like, I am, every time I'm in L.A. now I'm booking clean.
I never did that before, you know.
I was like, now I actually look forward to going and getting it clean.
But I just, it's the team you've built in the atmosphere, which was my first experience
realizing that, oh, like a dentist's office doesn't need to be like a cold, sterile environment.
It could be light and bright and comfortable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, when I first opened, gosh, like over 20 years ago.
So everyone would always say like, you're a dentist, really?
Because they're the stereotypical dentist is someone that you wouldn't really hang out with,
don't have that much in common with.
and you are fearful of, right?
So, like, dentistry is just like,
again, like, kind of like sitting in this chair right now,
but that's what it was.
And I loved the art of dentistry right out of dental school.
And, you know, I definitely have a very strong creative.
Obviously, I wear a doctor hat as well.
So I understand what goes, you know,
in terms of what has to be done from a medical standpoint
and from everything that I was trained for.
But what they don't train you for in dental school
is how to deal with that anxiety, how to, you know, how to come into an industry and potentially
shake it up because every dentist, you know, would think that, okay, well, that's how my dentist
was.
So then I'm going to set up the office the same way.
And dentists as a whole, love dentists, but as a whole are kind of like a little bit fearful
of change, right?
So, you know, you have dentists who've been doing the same thing and the same way for 30 years
and, you know, they wouldn't dream of doing it any other way because that's how they were taught in dental
school. But when I started, I was like, no, this is not going to work for me because I love the job,
but I don't love the setting. I don't love, you know, everyone coming in and being like, oh, my God,
I don't want to see you and all that kind of stuff. So that's where I started implementing those
changes of, you know, why does it have to feel so grim when you walk in? Why can't it have a beautiful
aesthetic? Why can't you get the same feel as you do when you walk into, you know, a Chanel style or, you know,
Why can't you get those smells and those and those feelings?
And why can't people be kind to you and nice to you?
And, you know, why can't somebody offer you a coffee before your appointment?
You offer me sparkling water.
Your team offers me sparkling water when I come in.
Right, with a straw.
With a straw.
You're so right, because I imagine on the other side, that's probably not a great feeling to work in a
profession where people dread seeing you.
It's terrible, right?
It's all that negative energy.
And they're bringing negative energy.
And then we become like sponges.
And then you, that's why you end up hating yourself and killing yourself.
and all the rest of it, you know. So right off the bat, that was definitely part of my MO. That was
definitely part of the agenda to change the mindset. And when you do that, it just, it's because the
thing that people don't understand is that the relationship that you have or the sensation that you
have around your mouth is incredibly intimate, right? I've had ladies who have come to me,
who've literally done every procedure that there is to do in their body, around, in and around
their face. But they say to me that, you know, but when it comes to my,
teeth, I'm petrified. I, you know, I, I, you know, the thought of it puts, you know,
since, you know, shivers down my spine. And so when, if you have somebody who's coming to you
with that kind of mindset, it's really hard if you're going to be, you know, super sterile with them.
And if you're not able to like break through and be the human behind the white coat and the
human behind what it is that they need from a dental perspective, then, you know, it's,
I think it's impossible to have that, you know, the right kind of doctor-patient relationship.
One thing I appreciate about you is, and you and I feel like are very synergistic and this is you do have an eye for aesthetics and it shows even from your office to the way you deal with your patients.
When you look at someone's teeth, what aesthetic marks are you looking for as someone who is so into aesthetics?
Well, I always take a step back.
So I think one of the crucial things to do when you're looking at teeth is actually you've got to look at the face.
So you can't really pull the two apart.
And I think that's where a lot of errors come in with aesthetic dentistry
because you can make the most gorgeous teeth, right?
Any laboratory can make you the most beautiful teeth.
They can make you the most straight teeth.
They can, you know, make the color and all the rest of it.
But what you have to understand is that those teeth have to go into a face.
And that face is what's framing those teeth.
So if you don't pay attention to where the lip line is,
if you don't look at the horizontal plane of how the pupils line up, right?
And if you don't work within the parameters of that person's face,
those perfect teeth will only be a distraction in that face because they don't belong there.
So what a lot of, you know, I think one of the issues,
and this is probably why veneers and the word veneers was kind of like a gross word.
You know, people say, oh, why are you getting veneers?
You're going to look so fake.
It's because you had something that was made on a bench top
that wasn't necessarily thought out for the face that it was going into.
So those are the aspects that I'm looking at.
So before I look at anyone's face, before I look at anyone's teeth,
I'm immediately, I'm looking at their face.
I'm looking at their skin tone.
I'm looking, you know, what are we working with?
Are we working with a younger person?
Are we looking with an older person?
What kind of skin tone do we have?
Do we have, you know, somebody who's super vibrant, you know,
because these all play a huge role into what you have to design
in order to make that beautiful smile work for that particular individual.
Makes total sense.
I think it's genius.
One thing that a dentist once told me, I think when I was like, I want to say like 12,
is they told me that a marker of youth is when you can see upper teeth when someone's talking.
What are things that you think mark youth, beauty and vibrance?
Or does it depend on what kind of face you have too?
It does.
It depends.
I mean, I'm definitely a big fan of the first.
on two teeth being a bit more prominent than the teeth on the side. I think that's always
instantly a more youthful look. It is obviously something that's more in tune with a woman's face
than a man's face. So if you start creating that longer and then an exaggerated shorter lateral,
which is the side teeth on men, that can slightly feminize the face. So you kind of, again, it's gender
plays a role in it as well. And then you go into shapes. And so, you know, an oval shape or a
slightly more bell shape is more attractive, more youthful on a woman. Once this, you know,
The, you know, once the aging process affects the teeth, you can sometimes turn a bell shape
into it turns ultimately into a bit of a rectangle, a bit of a square, and that can, again,
be a bit more of an aging effect on a woman's face.
But then when we're looking at shapes on men, typically, you know, you want a little bit more
of a square of profile to the tooth.
The teeth will just, in general, read a bit more masculine, a bit more attractive.
There are so many factors that go into looking to see, you know, how you can make something
more youthful. Translucency is another big factor when you're looking at the aging process and that
youthful thing that we're looking at. So people when they age, the teeth start getting a little more
on the see-through side, a little bit more translucent. So the teeth start reading a bit more on the
gray side. And those gray tones, if you have a bit of an older skin tone, will further age you.
So, you know, changing the translucency of your teeth, that can be another factor which adds youth to the
face. Also, this is so weird. But if someone has like gray or yellow teeth, I feel like it brings out
the gray and yellows of the eye.
It can do. It can do. Yeah, it can do. And then, you know, we are such judgmental people.
We judge people, right? We see someone and you see somebody who's got yellow stained teeth and you're,
you know, in your mind, you're thinking this, you know, they don't shower. They're probably dirty.
They probably smell, right? Whereas if you see somebody who's got a clean mouth, you know,
their teeth are clean, aligned straight, you're more likely to think that that's a clean person,
a more trustworthy person.
And it might not be true, right?
But the fact of the matter is,
is that's just how we read people
when we see, you know,
when we meet somebody for the first time.
When people come see you,
what is the most common thing
that people are not doing
that they could be doing better
to take care of their mouths?
Flossing.
Nobody flosses well enough,
in my opinion.
Hey, you know what?
Your team taught me?
I think you'd be impressed.
I'm like, I think I'm like a nine flosser now.
Okay, but you know what's annoying,
Dr. Sam is he's leaving his fucking floss around the house.
No, no, that's disgusting.
Throw it away, please.
Throw it away.
Dr. Sam said that's disgusting.
Don't be a nine flosser and is, don't, leave it around the house.
You know what?
You know what?
You know what?
I will admit I have left those around at times.
Not with me.
No, but, okay, go on by flossing.
Well, it's because you guys taught me this.
Yeah, well, flossing requires quite a lot of manual dexterity, right?
So a lot of people think that as long as you jam it in between the surfaces of the teeth,
then you've done a good job.
But that's not always enough.
right, because the tooth, a natural teeth, you know, even veneers that are done well, there's a slight curvature to each of the teeth when they meet each other.
So when you're flossing, what you're trying, what you need to kind of think of your flossing technique to be is imagine you're kind of doing a swiffer of the floors, right?
You don't want to just like in and out, right? You want to really clean that surface.
So that's why you want to make sure that the floss is actually contacting those side surfaces of the surface.
tooth. It's not just an in-and-out, you know, click, click, click in order to do it effectively.
And you like cocoa floss because... I love cocoa floss for a number of reasons. First of all,
a lot of the big-name brown flosses contain PFAs. So we know today that, you know, it's a man-made
product and it will never dissolve. It will never break down. So when you have, you know, that
in your product that you're using inside of your mouth every single day, that's going to be a little
alarming, you know, and you should be a bit more cautious in terms of, you know, having any of those
kind of materials because you're doing it every single day. So you're introducing a product to your
mouth that's never going to break down. And that, in my opinion, is not a good idea. So with cocoa floss,
you don't have any of the PFAs. What I also like about cocoa floss is that it has this slightly
spongy quality. So when it comes into contact with the saliva, it's swelling slightly. So if you go,
if I go back to my analogy of the swiffer of how, you know, you want to, you want to clean those in between
surfaces. So if it expands slightly, it gives you a bit more surface area to contact the tooths,
and that's how you're cleaning those in-between surfaces better.
Yeah, and I think what I've learned from you guys is the importance of not only cleaning the tooth,
but the keeping the gum health. Exactly. So by removing the debris that collects on the in-between
surfaces of the teeth, then you're just in general reducing the bacteria flora inside of your mouth,
which can lead to the gum issues, which can lead to bad breath, which can lead to cavities. So it's a very
important surface within the mouth to be cautious of. You know what I'm passionate about? Tell me.
Tongues scraping. Oh, I love that. Do not have cauliflower tongue. If I went on a date, I don't care
how hot you are, how big your bank account is, how big your dick is. If you have cauliflower
tongue, I'm out. Like you can't, can you talk about people should be doing it the first thing they
wake up? Well, I actually recommend doing it last thing you do before you go to bed. Especially if you're
married or you have a partner in your bed. You want to go to bed with a clean tongue. And it's super easy
Yeah, Michael.
I go to bed with a clean tongue.
It's super easy to do.
Now, two main things that you need to think about when you're using a tongue scraper.
We don't like plastic tongue scraper.
Again, plastics have products in them that you don't want to introduce to your body every single day.
And think of your tongue as a super absorbent surface inside of your body, right?
Think about all the drops and all the herbal remedies and all that that they ask you to put on your tongue.
Why do they do that?
It's because the tongue absorbs into the body.
the bloodstream really quickly. So you don't want to be rubbing plastics on your tongue,
you know, once a day and, you know, doing it several times. So stainless steel is the way to go.
I prefer stainless steel over copper. I know there's a lot of copper ones out there as well, but I like
stainless steel. And there's a, there's a great one that Boca makes, actually, with the plastic
handles on either side. So it's really simple to do. You just stand in front of your mirror,
you stick your tongue out, and then you place the tongue scraper as far back as you can tolerate, right?
Some people have a gag reflex.
And so, you know, you tell them do tongue scraping and they're like, oh, no, I have a gag
replace.
Well, some of the tongue is better than none of the tongue, right?
So you start as far back on the tongue as you're comfortable and then you gently press down
onto the tongue and then scrape forward.
And you want to do that maybe two or three times.
Once you see that residue, that brown stuff that comes onto your tongue scraper, trust me.
You're never going to go back.
You're never going to go back.
And then your gag reflex will miraculously go away as well.
Laura's gag reflex went away a long time ago.
My gag reflex is so good.
Michael's so blessed.
I get that tongue scraper down my throat.
No, but you're so right.
Once you start doing it and you see what comes off,
you never want it there again.
You just want a clean tongue.
I have a friend that I went on vacation with
and he stuck his tongue out in a photo and my entire audience was like,
ew, tell him to scrape his tongue!
And like reamed him and was like,
this is not skinny confidential behavior.
They'd like ruined him for cauliflower tongue.
tongue. He does not travel without that tongue scraper. Let me tell you. I'm glad for him.
So out of those things, like we're kind of going down a wellness path here with the floss and the
scraping. Like what are some of the long-term effects you see of people not doing that,
that you have to go in later and correct? Yeah. It's, it's, you know, well, your mouth is such an
important part in your body, right? That's how you eat, right? You know, you breathe through your
mouth. So it's such an important portal. So keeping your mouth healthy is not just,
just health of, you know, it's not just oral health care that we're talking about here. It's general
well-being. You know, reducing bacteria levels, there are stress hormones that can come into your mouth
and reducing those stress hormones by having very good oral hygiene can actually help you with sleep.
So it's, it has a lot of systemic effects. There are conditions of the heart that can be affected
by having high levels of bacteria in your blood levels. So you've really, you know, you've kind of
got to look at the mouth as a very important place from where your general health starts.
And I feel that people who do have good oral hygiene and look after their mouths, it's
kind of a precedent of how they're living their lives and how they're treating other parts
of their body. So it's a great start. And it's just, it's crucial. Yeah, I don't think,
I mean, people are starting to talk about it more. And obviously, you're on the podcast, but I don't
think people realize, I mean, they do. They've got to know inherently how important this vessel is for
I mean, I even think about blood pressure.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, there's nitrates that, you know, if you, for example, there are some mouthwashers,
you know, again, this is going to bring me on to my next thing, but that will affect the, you know,
if they're killing too many of the bacteria, because there are some bacteria in your mouth that you actually need,
and it can change the flora.
So, flora is basically the amount of, you know, good and bad bacteria that you have inside of your mouth.
So if you disrupt that, then you can actually, you know, there's studies that have been showed that
It can affect your blood pressure and it can have, you know, cardiovascular effects, negative
cardiovascular effects.
So it's definitely something that you're right.
It has been undermined.
People have kind of put it to the back bubble, but they're like, oh, my God, it's just
my teeth.
Or, you know, I have patients even until now that say that, you know, they only brush once a day.
So it's, you know, oral hygiene, I think is absolutely crucial in today's mindset where we're so
concerned about wellness.
You cannot have a conversation about wellness and not include oral hygiene.
Let's take a quick break to talk about ServPro.
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Luckily, a partner of this show is ServPro.
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man, oh man, would this had come into handy when I was in college. I remember I was trying to make my
apartment like the cutest ever and it was so hard because furniture was expensive. But let me tell
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Summer is here. We are hot. We are sweating, but we are not dehydrated, and that is because
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I think that a lot of people who are listening probably use that nostalgic mouthwash because they're addicted to the nostalgia.
They want the bun, right?
Yeah, the more it buns.
My dad used to use Brown Listerine and I associate that smell with my childhood.
But people don't understand what you're saying about the,
flora in the mouth. And you're a fan, I know, of organic oil pulling. You actually have your own
rinse. I use the cinnamon. It's so good. Michael likes the peppermint. What are the benefits of oil
pulling? Well, oil pulling's been around for thousands of years. So, you know, some people think that,
oh, it's a fad. Oh, I've heard about it or whatever. But it's actually been around for a very,
very long time. And in my book, if something's been around for a very long time, there's got to be
truth to it, right? Because things that are a fad or things that don't work.
work, they're not a fat anymore. And then, you know, 100 years later, nobody's doing it,
but people are still doing oil pulling. And the basic chemistry behind it is that you have molecules
in the oil that will physically bind to those bad bacteria and viruses that you can contain
within your mouth. So they actually bind to them, okay? And that's why oil pulling has to be done
over a period of time. So as you guys already know, I've told you this a thousand times,
Doing it in the shower is the best place to do it, five to ten minutes swish.
So you've got the oil all engaging into these, you know, things that you don't want inside of your mouth.
And then you spit it out.
So it draws it out of your mouth.
Whereas that mouthwash that burns or that mouthwash that, you know, you swish around, there are plenty of bacteria that you have.
And what we call them is they're hydrophobic, right?
So they don't like water.
So they go under the gum line.
So they're not necessarily in a place where that mouthwash will attract them.
So yes, that mouthwash after you've rinsed out, you may feel like you have a bit better breath.
That sting that you get psychologically tells you, oh, now I have a clean mouth.
But you'll be surprised how much of the bacteria that you don't want inside of your mouth is still in your mouth
following using those mouthwashes.
So that's where I see, you know, the big difference.
And aren't they finding that some of these mouthwashers actually have some ingredients that are not so great for us?
Yes, yes.
So obviously a lot of them have preservatives in them and all kinds of different artificial things.
and those burns are caused by chemicals that are not always good for us.
Again, it's running more of a psychosomatic of that feeling that, oh, it's burning,
so it must be doing a good job inside of my mouth.
And does the oil pulling with the coconut oil, is that good for the good and bad bacteria?
Yes.
So it maintains the flora.
So it's removing what we don't want inside of the mouth, but it's not taking away the bacteria
and the organisms that we actually need inside of our mouth for digestion purposes.
and just keeping up that floor to be in a healthy state.
Why do people's breath smell?
What does that come from and how can they fix it?
Okay, so halitosis is the polite way of saying you have bad breath, right?
If so, that's a...
I would say I have bad breath than I have halitosis.
For some reason, that sounds worse.
Oh, really?
Fair enough.
Well, this probably sounds like a more like a disease, right?
Yeah.
because part of halitosis can be from food that's basically left on the tongue,
and if you put your food in the rubbish, right, and you come back and you smell the rubbish,
it smells, right?
So it's kind of a similar process.
So by removing the debris that's sitting on your tongue, you are reducing the number of those
bacterias and that food debris that essentially could rot inside of your mouth and create that bad smell.
So tongue scraping, flossing.
Flossing is a huge part that could lead to halitosis.
Again, if you have spaces or if you have pockets within your teeth which could collect food,
which the food again goes down its degradation process, which can create, you know, those bad
smells, that's another factor that you have to take into consideration.
Brushing your teeth, obviously, that's huge and it's important to remove, you know, any debris
that you have on any three of the surfaces.
You'll be surprised how many people don't really know how to brush their teeth.
So, you know, anyone who comes and has consult for veneers with me, I literally have to sit down
and go through all these steps and all these protocols,
because your tooth has three surfaces.
You're not just brushing the teeth that you can see in the mirror.
You've got to brush the surface that you're chewing on,
there's top surfaces,
and there's also the whole inside surface of every tooth as well.
So all three surfaces have to be cleaned well.
Dehydration plays a huge role in halitosis,
so if you're not drinking enough water, that's a huge factor.
Terry, you drink water back there?
This guy back here has never met a glass of water he likes.
And then, of course, the kind of foods that you eat.
You know, you've got to be careful with the type of foods that you eat.
He eats Panda Express Orange Chicken every day for lunch.
Well, I'm sure he flosses and brushes afterwards.
I'm sure he doesn't.
He doesn't have all the doses.
You need to give him that oil.
Well, I don't.
No, Michael is a psycho.
No, do you know why?
Because Dr. Sam taught me about the three surfaces and the flossing.
Yeah, you taught us how to brush our teeth.
It sounds strange.
That sounds strange.
Yeah, I know.
And, you know, when I first started, I just thought, well, everyone knows how to do that.
No, they don't teach you.
I don't need to teach them that.
And then we would do veneers and then they would come back and things were just not where I wanted them to be.
So I was like, you know, fuck it.
I'm just going to teach people how to brush their teeth right when they said in my chair.
I don't care if they're older than me.
I don't care if they're going to get, you know, if I'm being rude or if I'm being patronizing.
But I'm going to do it because if you don't tell someone, then, you know, you just, you can't assume.
The best tips, I think it was you or Dr. Lee in your office gave me was you can't be brushing your teeth and doing something else.
No.
So I will be brushing my teeth and like cleaning up the bathroom.
Michael's floss is everywhere.
I'm cleaning up that.
That takes a long time.
But I mean like I'm just like doing other things.
And I think when you told me that I stopped habit stacking, brushing my teeth.
No, but you also, there's the toothbrush that you gave us.
And I use it now as like a little bit of form of meditation because it's a two minute brush.
Yeah.
And you get the green.
What's a brush we use?
It's like an oral.
It's the oral BIO.
Okay.
I love that.
I love that toothbrush.
And the two main reasons that I love that toothbrush is small round head, right?
Small circular head.
Your teeth are small and circular, right?
When you think about it.
So you get much better engagement of the brush to the tooth surface.
Some of the other, you know, big brands, you know, I'm not sure whether I should be speaking.
Go.
Okay, fair enough.
But, you know, we used to be a big fan of the Philipsonicat.
Love Philipsonic hair. It's great company. But I don't like the size of the head because it's really hard to get to the back surfaces of the teeth. You end up having to like come over and back and then position in and people have a hard time doing that. But when you have a small circular head, it's very easy to pivot and get those back surfaces. And the other thing that I love about this toothbrush is that it has that pressure indicating light on it. So the big problem that we have with patients is there the brush too hard. And it's usually the guys who do that. So they're brushing aggressively. They're like, okay, let me get these stains out and just go full full.
force. And when you do that, you cause gum recession. So gum recession is not good. It causes
sensitivity. And when we're talking about the aesthetics, the youthfulness, recession makes you look
older because now, you know, have you heard that, you know, English people say it a lot,
long in the tooth. I say long in the tooth every second, but I mean like long in the tooth like
they talk too much. Oh, really? Yeah, but you use it the long way. I know it means. Fair enough.
No, no, it's not. We've had a, it's funny. It's a debate on this show. I'm in a trade market.
Go ahead.
But doesn't long in the tooth mean that a horse, it's because a horse is aging?
Is that what it is?
And then they think?
Well, no, because as you age, the gums, you know, and if you're not good with your brushing,
you get the recession, right?
So now you've got the tooth is, you know, it's longer.
I swear that this term comes from horses aging.
I rebranded it to be like that person as long as we can come up with our own.
You're using it.
She uses it as people talk too much.
But you're saying it indicates age, which is the correct.
Yeah, it does.
It's not talking.
Yeah, I don't think it's talking.
Thank God, we settled that.
It's in two years of several.
Rebrand.
Go ahead.
So the gun makes you a hold on.
So that's why I like this toothbrush because it has the pressure indicating light on it.
So what I was coming back to is we get a lot of patients.
They either brush too hard or in some areas they're not brushing hard enough.
So they're getting the accumulation.
So this toothbrush has this light on it on the neck of the tooth.
When you're brushing at the right pressure, the light will go green.
When you're brushing too aggressively, so when you're being too hard, it's going to
going to go red. So red is an alert. Hey, relax, right? Don't press too hard. And then there's
another light is when you're being too gentle. So that really enables people who use this toothbrush
to regulate the pressure that they're applying to the three surfaces of the teeth. So it's literally
foolproof. And that's what I love about it. And then it gives you a smiley face with stars if you did
it right. I have a white one and a black one that I got from you guys and I use my white one
in the morning and the black one at night because I don't want the same bacteria.
This is my theory.
Well, it's going in the same mouth if you think about it.
It's my theory.
But I think, you know, that's great.
I'm sure that's a nice aesthetic on your bathroom, but it's not necessary.
Okay.
It's not necessary.
And again, you definitely want to put the cap over the top because there have been studies that show that, you know, when you flush the toilet,
there, you know, there can be things that can get onto your toothbrush.
I've learned to shut the lid.
So, yeah.
Do not go to the bathroom in my bathroom.
That bathroom is not for you to use.
Go use your bathroom and your man cave.
Let's talk about aesthetics here.
And veneers for a second.
When you see, you help me with my front teeth because I had, I knocked my teeth out when I was seven.
And then I got a job and it was mess and you completely fix it.
And now I'm like, just like, I'm smiling like a king over here.
Johnny Bravo.
When you see patients come that either you're correcting or what do you see patients either
asking other dentists, maybe the wrong things or doing the wrong things?
what are you correcting? What are you hoping to see, not see? Like, let's talk about veneers for a little bit
because you see, we see a lot of obvious ones that are maybe not so great. And then we see, like,
mine, I think, like the front, you could barely even tell, which is your work. But what are,
what are patients doing wrong maybe when it comes to speaking to their dentist about veneers?
Right. So there's two issues that we typically get to coming to the office. One is functionality.
and, you know, the lady that we just saw earlier, she, you know, she mentioned that to you, right?
Didn't she say she was like, oh my God, I need to come to see her because my veneers keep falling off, right?
Veneers should not be popping off.
So a veneer that pops off, you know, regularly just during normal functioning, that's an issue.
So you shouldn't be living with your veneers popping off from time to time.
Now, I don't want to set false expectations if you get punched in the face.
If you, you know, if you go skiing and you fall, if you, you know,
if you have trauma, you know, the veneer can break, your tooth can break.
You know, you can have fractures.
But the fact that they fall off, that's a functional issue, which leads back to how are they designed.
So the preparation of the natural tooth structure is a crucial part of it.
Sometimes, you know, you may have some dentists that reduce too much natural tooth structures,
so now you don't have enough actual tooth to hold on to.
And if that's the case, again, the remedy has to be sorted out before you put your new veneer over the top,
then the actual placement of the veneer.
Placement of veneers is something that's incredibly technique sensitive.
So you have to have an area which is completely dry.
You have to have your systems down in terms of the products that you're using
and how you're applying the product to the natural tooth structure
and following all the protocols really rigorously
because if you don't do that, again, you can have these things fail.
So it is a failure of the restoration.
So we have functionality.
Functionality can be them falling after.
another functionality issue can be bite, right? So our teeth, you know, a lot of times I have to
remind patients when they come and see me just, you know, because they want to prettify their teeth,
is your teeth are not just for looking at. You use your teeth. You have to chew with them. You have to
eat with them. You have to speak with them. The teeth play a huge role in annunciation,
specifically of words like S and 66. If you get, you know, if you make something a little bit too
thick on the inside, you're going to have a hard time announcing your S's. So the teeth have
to be functional. So those are the parameters that we get people coming to see us in terms of
revision work. And then, of course, aesthetics. So aesthetics, there is, I would say a global
trend for a little bit more of a natural aesthetic. When I started doing veneers, you know, over 20 years
ago, specifically my US patients, the demand was, I want them all to look, they should all be on
the same plane, so they like teeth, which were all level, they didn't like teeth that were
up and down. They didn't like anatomy, so they didn't want to see much anatomy in the tooth structure,
and then they wanted them, you know, toilet bowl white. So that was, not that I gave them this,
but I'm just telling you that's basically, I know you want this, but I'm not going to let you have it.
But that was kind of, I would say, what was typically requested. But today, I feel that there is a
change, and people are seeing the beauty behind a natural aesthetic. They see, they understand how
natural can actually look more attractive and natural can actually enhance the face as opposed to
potentially creating a distraction within the face. Yeah, you don't want someone to just be staring at
your teeth when they're talking to you. No, but you know, when I, right, all the teeth to speak
before you do. Yes. Right? Because sometimes you'll, yeah, you'll see someone.
No, it's not going to let it go. That's obnoxious teeth.
So when I was seven, I wish I had a cooler story, but I fell off a ramp rollerblading of all things.
I just really wish it was much cooler.
And for years, I did, what is it called, bonding?
Yeah.
Or cap things.
And I finally just got so fed up with it because they kept coming off or popping off.
They would fall off.
I remember.
Yeah, we were kids.
And so I just, but when I came to you, I don't need giant chicklets announcing, like,
I don't need my teeth to walk into the room before me.
Right.
Right.
What celebrity are people bringing to you all the time?
You know, we talk a lot about Margot Robbie's smile.
Yeah.
I think she has a really gorgeous smile.
She does.
And so, you know,
I've broken this down on my social media a few times.
What makes her smile attractive?
Because it is a natural smile.
She's naturally beautiful, right?
So she's got a very, very attractive face.
And those teeth belong in her mouth really well.
So she has that classic lineup of teeth, which I admire in a woman where the front two teeth are more dominant.
And when you look at where the front two teeth line up, so the wall of the front two teeth, where they meet each other, that's what we call the midline.
So that line, that vertical line, how your front two teeth meet up, they are very well centered
within her face.
So that sets you up for symmetry.
So if you would imagine, if you put an imaginary line at the cross point of where the pupils
are in her face and draw a line down the center of her face, then her front two teeth will literally
be sitting on that line, which gives you a really nice symmetrical outcome.
So the symmetry there is beautiful.
And then when you go to the teeth on the side, they are slightly shorter, right?
So those are the laterals.
And that gives that kind of bunny smile, that sexy, that youthful, attractive smile.
And then when you go to her canines, they have a bit of a point to them.
So again, the trend back in the day was, I don't want canines.
I want them to be flat.
I want everything to be on the same line.
But again, I don't think that's attractive.
I don't think that's youthful.
So she has a bit of a point to a canine, which is sexy.
And then after there, the premolars, which are the teeth after the canines, which were not done, by the way.
Back in the day, veneers where you get six.
That was the typical number of veneers that you would do.
And that leads to the horsey smile, if you want to know.
Yeah, that's where you take the front.
The front six, yeah.
So, I mean, sometimes we do six until now if you've got great architecture in the backs,
but it can also be a huge giveaway when you do six and then you don't do the two premolos on either side.
Because as soon as you turn your head or if you do your, you know, your big cheesy grain or a really big smile,
you can see where the veneers finish and the natural tooth structure starts and then it's a giveaway.
It's like, oh, yeah, you've got veneers.
She does have a beautiful smile.
and that line makes total sense.
One thing that has helped me so much with losing 60 pounds.
You guys know this.
If you follow me on Instagram,
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As you know, I have been on a journey to making my home in Texas non-toxic. I'm really trying, guys.
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I started on this whole like endeavor, probably, I don't know, three years ago when I moved to Austin,
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And I feel like when I'm home now, my nervous system gets reset because we have been so
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And one thing I learned recently was that there is a lot of toxins in the garden and in the yard.
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I would love to talk about children and their palate.
I am noticing, you're the perfect person out because you're aesthetics.
I'm noticing that, call me crazy, the lack of us chewing hard foods as kids is leading to underdeveloped jaws and mouse.
Have you found that and how can we combat that in our children?
That's an interesting question.
I mean, I want to preface that I'm not a pediatrician.
I don't do pediatrics.
So it's definitely not an area of expertise for me.
I would say that that could certainly play a role in it.
I think a bigger adjunct to that developmental issue is mouth breathing.
And the reason I say that is that some of my kids, I've noticed that they started mouth breathing,
and I'm seeing changes in development in terms of how the lower third of the face can form as a result of that.
So I think that's a crucial part, you know, within the development of the palate, because that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, in that period of time.
with respect to the experience that I've had with children,
one of the things that happens a lot as part of orthodontic treatment
is extraction of premolars.
So especially when I was a child.
So that was the routine thing to do.
Parents would bring their children,
their children's teeth were crooked, right?
So what crooked teeth means is that there's just not enough room,
so they need more room in order to straighten these teeth out.
So then they would routinely extract the premolars,
right? So four pre-molors typically are extracted. And then now when I see those children as adults,
they have the narrow smile because they have one less tooth in the arch form.
Is that you're... No, no, no, no. This is before the molars.
So you don't want to get those. I do not like the practice of extracting premolars. I would tell
parents who listen to this podcast to be cautious when you do that because yes, it'll give you
the space with which you can straighten the teeth out. But then as an adult, we present with different
aesthetic problems, which is typically that narrower smile. I'm reading this book called Beauty is in
the Bones. And in this book, the woman recommends widening the palate as a child so the,
so the child can breathe better through their nose. Have you heard of this? I've heard of things
that circulate around there. Again, I want to preface that it's definitely not my area of expertise. And
I wouldn't want to pass judgment on something like that because I don't have the education
that would be able to give me that viewpoint.
But I'm sure, I'm sure these things are all heavily related to one another.
Are you a fan of mouth taping?
I am a big fan of mouth taping.
You are.
So you're even as an adult.
For many reasons, actually, even outside of the development of the palate, because
when you are breathing through the mouth, you're also, again, it's the bacteria's inside
of your mouth.
you're changing the bacteria flora slightly because you're introducing a lot more air and oxygen
into the mouth than you would if your mouth was closed. So yes, I think if you're a mouth breather,
it is a good idea to use mouth tape. I got you some skinny confidential mouth tape and Monica,
we need to get skinny confidential mouth tape in your office because it's aesthetically pleasing.
It is aesthetically pleasing. Yeah, it's beautiful. But Michael, do you wear one?
Do you know, I think that I do, I do wear them at times, but I also,
think I'm a nose breather. Okay, that's good. Because I was going to say, what happens when you have
beard or when you have facial hair? It does, my mouth tape is very strong. Very strong. I designed it to
be the strongest, but it is, I think, more for women. Okay. I have noticed, and this call me crazy,
since I started mouth taping that the muscle in my jaw has become stronger, which has given me,
I don't know if I'm just such an aesthetic person. It's given me more strength than my jaw, and my tongue
posture has changed, which has kind of changed my face. Oh, it's huge. Those things that make a huge
difference. I never thought about it until I got older and just when we started talking about it a lot more
of people. But now, now that I've seen it, now I can't unsee it. You know, when I see people. No, it's huge.
I mean, one of the things you were talking about, you know, anti-aging and how teeth can play a role in that.
When we age, one of the things that happens is our back molar teeth get shorter, right? Because we're grinding our teeth,
we're stressed, you know, and the whole aging process makes this back supporting area shorter.
When this gets shorter, the lower third of the face becomes collapsed, because this is what's
holding your jaw from closing all the way down.
So if you've ever seen somebody who wears dentures, right, when they take their dentures out,
the whole face like kind of disintegrates.
So now you know the value of your teeth because it's the teeth which is supporting the lips
and it's also holding the jaw in the position that it is.
So one of the things that we do often on cases where we're doing anti-aging dentistry
is we increase that vertical dimension.
So by making your molar teeth slightly taller, right,
now you're not able to shut down quite so hard.
And if you have a collapsed lower third of your face,
that actually makes the angle of the jaw stronger because now your chin is not so far forward.
It's a little bit further back because you can't shut down so much.
If you guys are listening to this, you can tell that there is so much detail that goes into making a smile useful.
It's not just putting veneers in there.
Oh, no.
If someone is listening from a different country, a different state, maybe they don't have the funds to come to you.
You're the best of the best.
What would you tell them to look for in a dentist who's performing veneers?
Well, I would tell you this.
First of all, I'm a big fan of prevention, right?
So a lot of what I'm telling, you can actually be prevented.
So the collapse of the vertical lower third of the face, if you commit to wearing a night guard
in your 20s, and that's a big ask, because when we're 20, we're reckless, right?
We don't care about those kind of things.
We're just too busy trying to shag.
If you tell them their teeth.
Well, wonderful.
If you tell them their teeth are going to collapse as their face is going to fall under.
But that's what I mean.
I mean, I think the beauty of what we're doing now, you know, with podcasts and, you know,
just the general education that's out there that maybe wasn't, you know, as common back in the day.
So prevention is best. So if you get into wearing a night guard early, if you do all the oral hygiene
things that we spoke about, then you're less likely to need to come and see somebody like me or
wherever somebody else might be. But if you are in the need and let's say you don't want to come out
to London or you don't want to come out to L.A., although a lot of people do come and see anything.
Yeah, he's got people flying it all over. They do travel. But if you don't, then I would say a number of
things that you want to look at. First of all, don't be scared to ask questions.
questions, right? So I have people who will come into my chair and they'll literally ask me questions
for 45 minutes. And I like it when they do that because this tells me that I have a serious
patient who's done their homework. They know what's going on. They know what's up and they're
able to vet me in the correct way that they should. And I'm able to answer their questions
and I'm able to show them what it is that they're asking of me. And therefore, you've set the tone
and therefore you're going to be able to, you'll know whether you're going to meet the expectation
or not. I think where people go wrong is that they, you know, they sit in the chair and they're like,
I want veneers and the, and the doctor goes, okay, fine, I'll give you veneers. No, you want to go in there.
You want to be, well, how long have you been doing this? Can you show me cases that you've done that are
similar to mine? Can I see your laboratory, you know, speak to the staff members. Can I speak to
previous patients. So these are all things that, you know, I think it's important in terms of vesting
your doctor and making sure that you're going to the right person that's, you know, right for you
on two levels, right? Because there's two levels in this. There's the level of expertise. So you can
have a really qualified doctor who knows exactly what he's doing is excellent at his craft. But if that
doctor's not working with an excellent lab, right? So the lab is who will actually make the porcelain veneer,
then his work becomes worthless because what's going to go inside of your mouth is not going to be at the quality and the standard that it needs to be.
So those are two very important factors that go into play when you're talking about high-end aesthetics for the mouth or not only high-end but functional aesthetics.
You know, the veneers that don't pop off. They don't look artificial.
You know, you can chew normal foods and not have to worry about them cracking and breaking and things like that.
So we in my setup, the lab is in-house, which means that all my ceramists are in the same office as me.
So therefore it becomes seamless because what I tell someone, I'm watching that happen and I'm under the supervision of creating what it is that I'm telling them.
So I think that that plays a huge role in this level of aesthetics too.
Yeah, and you did, you educated me so much.
and I came with injuries and problems
and also probably from a perspective
of I never advocate for yourself.
I had these issues and then I just let someone do
whatever they said they were gonna do.
I think a lot of us just,
when it comes to the field of dentistry,
where it's like, Dennis knows best,
we don't know what to do,
whatever they say goes.
Like obviously you had to fix a lot of issues for me,
you know, from whatever happened to me.
But I just didn't know.
I just accept, I just kind of went somewhere
like who can help fix my shit
that I fucked up when I was a kid.
Right, and to that point, you know,
I ramble a lot in consultation.
So I think probably in town, I'm, you know, my consultations are the longest.
But I always tell my patience, I'm like, knowledge is power.
So let me tell you everything so that you can make the best decision for yourself.
Michael, Doja Cat, The Weekend, Doreet, P.K., the Royals, celebrities.
You have a lot of celebrities.
I like how you put me at the top of that list.
Yeah, no, but a lot of, one thing about you is a lot of the celebrities that you work with prefer to be
anonymous and you're so respectful of that.
I think that's incredible.
Can we do?
I didn't even ask you this, but can we do a giveaway for a consultation and a teeth cleaning with you?
Yeah, for sure.
I think that'll be fun.
Okay.
So all you guys have to do is follow.
What is your Instagram?
It's my name.
So it's Dr. Sam Sala.
Follow him on Instagram.
Tell us your favorite takeaway of this episode on my latest post.
And one of you will win a consultation and a teeth cleaning with Michael and my dentist.
I go for teeth cleanings every three months.
I'm militant about it.
Your office is the best.
You've taught me how to brush my teeth, how to,
floss. I'm so grateful. If people want to shop your organic oil pulling rinse, get the cinnamon,
trust me. Where can they find that? How can they shop your products? So there's a link on the
website. Okay. And then it's also linked through the Instagram page. Okay. And then if someone
wants to book veneers with you or a treatment or a teeth cleaning or anything, where can they find you? Can
they DM you? Yeah, you can DM, but it's better to go through the online form that we have. It'll
take in all your information. It'll specify where you'd like to have your consultation, and then
one of our team members will reach out and make all the arrangements. One of my things that I pride
myself on, as we know after this conversation and yourself is aesthetic. So if you guys are looking
for anything aesthetic when it comes to dentistry, this is your guy. I'm a functional though.
And functional, and I'm a psycho about vetting. I mean, I look, I'm a practitioner of just like
looking who is the best of the best. And I am putting.
my stamp on Dr. Sam. I have to look at Michael's teeth every day. So you actually aren't,
you didn't do that for Michael. You did it from my eyes. Listen, I had problems.
Thank you to your entire office to Monica, Dr. Lee, everyone at the office. You've been so
amazing. You guys go see Dr. Sam and just give your practice a shout out in the URL one more time.
Go floss your teeth. Go floss your teeth. What's the practice if they want to Google you?
Dr. Sam Sala. Easy. All right. Thank you, Dr. Sam.
Thank you, buddy.
Thank you.
Thank you.
If you guys want to go ask Dr. Sam any questions, just head over to his Instagram at Dr. Sam Salae.
He will be in the DMs with his team making sure they can answer all of your questions.
And definitely check out that oil pulling rinse.
The cinnamon is the best.
I'm really into it and the peppermint's good too.
It just makes your breath smell minty fresh.
And don't forget to tongue scrape.
