Condition
Halitosis
in plain English.
The clinical term for chronic bad breath. It’s usually traced to bacteria on the tongue and gums, gum disease, or dry mouth — all of which can be addressed.
The definition, in plain English
The clinical term for chronic bad breath. It’s usually traced to bacteria on the tongue and gums, gum disease, or dry mouth — all of which can be addressed.
Why this matters when you’re sitting in the chair
You won’t hear most clinical terms in a Culpeper Dental Care visit without a follow-up sentence in everyday language — that’s the standard Dr. Sanie holds for every conversation. But it’s useful to know “halitosis” ahead of time so you can ask better questions and recognize when something on your treatment plan refers to it. If a recommendation mentions halitosisand you want a second pass at the explanation, just ask — that’s exactly what your visit is for.
When “halitosis” comes up at Culpeper Dental Care
Most patients encounter this term during one of three moments: while reviewing a treatment plan, when comparing options with Dr. Sanie, or while reading after-care instructions at home. We always pair the clinical word with the plain-English version so nothing about your care feels mysterious. If you’d like us to walk through the term in the context of your own mouth, mention it at your next exam.
Have a question about this?
The dental dictionary is a starting point, not a substitute for an exam. If you want this term explained for your own situation, call 540-418-0825 or book your visit at culpeperdentist.com/book-online.
Related condition terms
- AbscessA localized pocket of pus caused by a bacterial infection in a tooth or the gum tissue around it. Abscesses can be painful and need prompt treatment to stop the infection from spreading.
- BruxismThe habit of grinding or clenching your teeth, often during sleep. Long-term bruxism wears down enamel and can cause headaches and jaw pain. A custom night guard usually helps.
- Calculus (Tartar)Hardened plaque that has mineralized onto your teeth. Once it forms, calculus can only be removed by a dental professional during a cleaning.
- CavityA small hole in a tooth caused by bacterial acid breaking down the enamel. Cavities don’t heal on their own — they’re treated with a filling, inlay, or crown depending on size.
- Decay (Caries)The gradual breakdown of tooth structure caused by acids from plaque bacteria. The medical term is dental caries; the common term is tooth decay.
- Dry Mouth (Xerostomia)Chronically reduced saliva flow, often caused by medications. Without enough saliva, the risk of cavities and gum disease climbs — there are simple products and routines that help.
New patients welcome
Your calmer dental visit
is one conversation away.
Tell us a little about what you need — we’ll listen, answer your questions, and find a time that fits your life. No pressure, no rush.
¿Habla español? Llámenos al 540-418-0825 — estamos aquí para ayudarle.