Meth Mouth
Meth Mouth
Cheap, Easy-to-Make Illicit Drug
Methamphetamine is a cheap, easy-to-make illicit drug. It’s known by several street names: Meth, Speed, Ice, Chalk, Crank, Fire, Glass, and Crystal. It is highly addictive and its use is on the rise in the U.S. even though it produces devastating effects on users’ health.
Meth Mouth
Dentists are seeing “more and more of a condition we call meth mouth,” ADA President Robert M. Brandjord told U.S. senators trying to get a better picture of methamphetamine abuse at a Capitol Hill forum. Meth mouth is characterized by rampant caries or tooth decay. Some users describe their teeth as "blackened, stained, rotting, crumbling or falling apart," he testified with clinical illustration. “Often, there is no hope of treating methamphetamine damaged teeth, leading to full mouth extractions.” “The American Dental Association believes meth mouth is a very serious disease that is robbing people, especially young people, of their teeth,” Dr. Brandjord testified.
Potent Central Nervous System Stimulant
Methamphetamine is a potent central nervous system stimulant that can cause shortness of breath, hyperthermia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, irregular heart beat, high blood pressure, permanent brain damage and rampant tooth decay.
Meth is Highly Acidic
The extensive tooth decay is attributed to the drug’s acidic nature and its tendency to dry mouth tissues. A methamphetamine “high” lasts much longer than that produced by crack cocaine (12 hours versus one hour for cocaine). This can lead to long periods of poor oral hygiene. And while they are high, users often crave high-calorie, carbonated, sugary beverages or they may grind or clench their teeth, all of which can harm teeth.
Heavy users may appear malnourished because methamphetamine acts as an appetite suppressant.
National Survey on Drug Use and Health
According to the 2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 12.3 million Americans age 12 and older had tried methamphetamine at least once in their lifetimes (5.2 percent of the population), with the majority of past-year users between 18 and 34 years of age. Significant decreases in the past year use were seen among 12- to 17-year-olds.
Traffickers have aggressively targeted rural areas in an effort to escape law enforcement, and most use is found in the western, southwestern, and midwestern U.S.

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