Archive for the ‘Dentist’ Category

Best Tooth Whitening

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

Best tooth whitening, that’s what all manufacturers claim their teeth whitening product offers.

Teeth become dark over time from coffee, smoking, red wine, genetics and other products. To remove these discolorations, the best tooth whitening products use a carbamide peroxide gel in a concentration between 22% and 38%. The higher the concentration of the gel, the faster results will occur, however increased sensitivity is more frequent. The best tooth whitening method is used in the privacy of your own home.

The best tooth whiteners involve using a glycerin based whitening gel, which is placed in a tray that fits over the teeth and helps to make the tray feel more comfortable. As the carbamide peroxide gel breaks down, oxygen enters the enamel on the teeth and bleaches away the stains. Optimal results generally occur within 10-14 days but immediate results are often seen within 24 hours.

The best tooth whitening methods you can do yourself will achieve the same results you achieve having the procedure done in a dentist’s office. Get the best tooth whitening products from Brighter Image Teeth Whitening.

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Smile, you’re in the dental care aisle

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

One thing I’ve been genetically blessed with is good teeth. Lousy eyes, but great pearly whites. So maybe that’s why I was slow to catch on to the oral hygiene revolution overtaking this country.

Powered toothbrushes that sell for more than $100, whiteners, mouthwashes that do double duty by preventing cavities or controlling tartar or gingivitis. Toothpaste in every conceivable flavor.

“People want teeth like Chiclets,” said Katie L. Dawson, president of the American Dental Hygienists’ Association and a clinical hygienist for the last 30 years.

The makeover shows, she thinks, are a large part of the reason oral hygiene – especially whitening – has become so popular.

As dental care has started moving from being a necessary but boring chore to another way to be glamorous, more and more products are moving onto shelves.

A visit to the toothbrush aisle in the neighborhood drugstore has become a long, drawn-out affair. For consumers, confusion abounds about what to buy, and whether, in fact, most of these items are essential.

“It’s mind-boggling – you need an advanced degree,” said Carol Hall of Pelham, N.Y.

“There’s been a baffling product explosion. There’s toothpaste with whitening, toothpaste with cavity prevention. And if you want to get me crazy, talk about toothbrushes. I stick with manual toothbrushes, and even that’s confusing. I’ll come home with what I think is a deal on toothbrushes, and then I open them and realize I bought extra-long medium, not extra-long soft.”

No wonder consumers are bewildered. According to the Datamonitor Productscan Online database, which monitors the introduction of products, 112 new toothpastes were sold in 2004. Figures from Intelligent Resources Inc. show that Americans spent $1 billion worth on toothpaste over the last 52 weeks, $439.7 million on manual toothbrushes and $194.6 million on powered toothbrushes. That number includes drugstores and supermarkets, but excludes Wal-Mart.

Dr. Kimberly Harms, consumer adviser for the American Dental Association and a dentist in Farmington, Minn., knows that people are perplexed.

“We call it the dental aisle of confusion,” says Dr. Harms.

She suggests that patients ask their dentists during regular checkups what is essential for oral hygiene and what is unnecessary. Do they have a lot of tartar buildup? Do they have sensitive teeth? Pick the products that address specific needs.

The first thing is to make sure the toothbrush can be held comfortably, whether it is manual or powered.

Then brush longer – most dentists recommend two minutes – and well enough to do the job.

“All you really need is a manual toothbrush, a bit of floss and some time,” Dr. Harms said.

So why do I feel I am missing something by not buying the IntelliClean System from Philips Sonicare and Crest, which retails for around $130? Introduced earlier this year, it is a toothbrush that pumps liquid toothpaste directly onto the bristles before and during brushing. It also has a signal every 30 seconds to move to another quadrant of the mouth, and a two-minute timer. It also, according to news releases, brushes three times faster than other leading power toothbrushes.

That much dental hygiene before bedtime might make it hard to get to sleep.

The fact is, although people may love their high-powered toothbrushes, there is no evidence that they do a better job than manual ones.

Earlier this year, the Cochrane Collaboration, a British-registered nonprofit organization focusing on health care, released a review of 42 trials comparing the two types of toothbrushes.

“In most cases, manual toothbrushes remove as much plaque as their expensive electronic counterparts, and protect just as well against inflamed gums,” the researchers said in the report.

The only exceptions were electric toothbrushes with rotating-oscillating heads, which rotate in one direction and then another; these did prove to be more effective.

Experts say powered toothbrushes may be good for people who have arthritis or problems with manual dexterity, or for those who rush through their brushing.

“The results show that many people may be wasting money on toothbrushes they believe will clean their teeth better, when actually a much cheaper traditional brush would do the job just as well,” the summary of the report states.

Dr. Harms, as it turns out, has a mixed marriage – she uses a manual toothbrush, while her husband swears by his expensive electric one.

No toothbrush, she said, can get between teeth, no matter what the advertisers say, and that is why flossing is necessary (and not just the day or two before a dental visit, which I’ve been known to do).

As dental care is moving from being a boring chore to another way to be glamorous, more and more products are moving onto shelves.

Brighter Image whitening offers the best teeth whitening products that you can use in your own home. Get Brighter Image Teeth Whitening and your bright white smile is only a few days away. Our product works so well we offer a no questions asked 100% Results Satisfaction Guarantee.

Courtesy New York Times

Brite Smile Teeth Whitening

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

The Brite Smile Teeth Whitening manufacturers use the same cabamide peroxide gel that is that of the Brighter Image system. In recent laboratory tests in two independent dental organizations, the light used by Brite Smile Teeth Whitening was shown to have no effect in increasing the level of whitening that occurs during the bleaching procedure. The end result was that tray whitening done at home was superior to in office whitening and much more cost efficient.

Brite Smile Teeth Whitening cost between $500-$1000 per treatment and are done at company owned whitening centers and affiliated independent dental offices. The cost of the Brite Smile Teeth Whitening products is the same as one would pay in a dentist’s office for power bleaching. Those customers using the power bleaching process offered by Brite Smile Teeth Whitening have to use dietary restrictions for a short time after having the treatment.

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What is white enough?

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

When will your teeth be white enough?

Dentists are asking that question of some of their patients who frequently bleach their teeth.

“To put it bluntly, I’ve never had a patient who was totally satisfied that their teeth were white enough,” said Dr. William Wathen, a professor of clinical general dentistry at <a href=”http://www.tambcd.edu/”>Baylor College of Dentistry in Dallas</a>.

For more than a decade, the Council on Scientific Affairs of the American Dental Association has monitored products used to bleach tooth enamel. The ADA has found the dentist-prescribed home bleaching products safe if used over a two to four-week period for no more than one hour every day.

“The question is whether it—over-whitening—does damage,” Dr. Wathen said. “And at this point, we don’t know. We haven’t been doing it long enough. This over-whitening has only been occurring in the last five years. It takes 25, 30, maybe 50 years—perhaps a lifetime—to see any long-term harmful effects.”

If tooth sensitivity develops, the <a href=”http://www.ada.org”>ADA</a> recommends patients stop using the bleach for at least a day.

Currently, all the in-office whiteners that have the ADA Seal contain between 16 and 38 percent hydrogen peroxide. The ADA advises that patients consult with their dentists before they choose any whitening method.

“It starts looking phony when it gets outside the average range of tooth color,” Dr. Wathen said.

Your teeth should not be whiter than the whites of your eyes. And if you’re an over-whitener, be advised that we really don’t know the long-term effect of over-whitening.

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(Courtesy WFAA)

Does Cola Damage Teeth?

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

Cola may be an innocent victim of its corrosive reputation. A recent study shows that other sodas, sports drinks and even lemonade appear to have a more corrosive effect on tooth enamel.

The study, published in the Journal of The Academy of General Dentistry, showed other drinks are 6 to 11 times more corrosive than cola.

In order, with the most corrosive first, they are: lemonade, energy drinks, sports drinks, fitness water, and commercial iced teas. Cola “brings up the rear” on this list.

What makes these drinks so corrosive to teeth?

New York City cosmetic dentist Dr. Nancy Rosen explains to The Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith that most cola-based drinks contain one or more acids, such as citric and phosphoric acids. The sports beverages contain not only citric and phosphoric acids, but also other additives and organic acids. The acids are put in to give the drinks a longer shelf life and to give them their tangy tastes.

But acids cause dental enamel erosion, meaning they eat away at the hard, protective coating of teeth, which can then break, be brittle, chipped or translucent at the edges, and lose their color and shine. That can give you an unattractive smile, and cause sensitivity and pain. For the study, scientists “marinated” chunks of healthy human tooth enamel in the drinks for 14 days, weighing them every 24 to 48 hours to see how much enamel was being lost.

Rosen says that’s not realistic, because people don’t hold drinks in their mouth for 14 days, but it does demonstrate the corrosive effects of the acids in the drinks, and she’s seen lots of dental erosion in people who drink them.

But, dental experts agree, that’s no reason to ditch the drinks you love.

The good news, says Rosen, is that you can minimize the corrosive effects. How? 1. Drink less and drink it in a short period of time. “You gotta chug it,” Rosen advises. 2. Rinse with water or chew sugarless gum. “That way, the acid is rinsed away from your teeth and isn’t sticking to your teeth.” 3. Drink through a straw 4. Drink the liquids when they’re chilled. That reduces acid potency 5. Don’t suck on lemons. Limit citric flavor candies that rest against teeth. The bad news, Rosen warns, is that dental erosion is irreversible. Once tooth enamel is gone, it’s gone.

Incidentally, root beer is the least corrosive soda, because it has the smallest amount of acid and additives.

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