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Building
a Better Smile
Excerpt
from
ABCNews.com
With demand for a whiter smile growing, there is a wide
field of products that promise to brighten teeth and bring dull
or stained choppers back to pearly white. But which ones are worth
the money?
Sales of toothpastes with a whitening
claim jumped 22 percent last year at supermarkets, drugstores
and mass merchants. But the surge in toothpastes has been outstripped
by over-the-counter bleaching products. Leading in sales figures
is Crest Whitestrips, which came out last May. Procter & Gamble
is projecting at least $200 million in first-year retail sales
for Whitestrips.
But are there real results for the money spent? In general,
people who use the products start to see a real difference when
their teeth turn three shades lighter or more, according to
Good Housekeeping, which tested five alternative ways to whiten
your teeth.
Here are the magazine's findings.
Best Whiteners
Overall best: the Crest Night Effects do-it-yourself product
and the in-office bleaching at Britesmile and Zoom! centers. All
three lightened teeth up to five shades.
Crest Night Effects, which costs $14.99, was introduced
in stores in March. To try it out, six Good Housekeeping
testers applied paint-on gel to their teeth right before bed for
14 nights. The product uses "LiquidStrip Technology," which holds
the whitening agent to the teeth while you sleep. The whitening
gel forms a LiquidStrip coating on the teeth that works to remove
stains and loosen stain-causing buildup. In the morning, users
brush the LiquidStrip coating and stains away. Night Effects was
found to lighten teeth from two to five shades, according to a
dental shade gauge for teeth. But testers noted that the gel felt
"goopy" after application.
Britesmile and Zoom! The other top alternatives were in-office
bleaching at Britesmile and Zoom! centers. The price is $400 to
$600, depending on location. A special light activates hydrogen
peroxide gel applied to teeth (15 percent of hydrogen peroxide
in the Britesmile gel and 25 percent for Zoom!). Both concentrations
are lower than some home whitening gels, which have 35 percent
to 50 percent. The procedure takes about one hour.
Britesmile and Zoom lightened teeth by three to five shades.
One tester experienced sensitivity.
Second-Place Whiteners
In second place were Crest Whitestrips and Colgate Simply White,
which lightened teeth up to three shades.
Crest Whitestrips, under $30. Testers applied flexible
strips twice a day, 30 minutes at a time, for 14 days and the
results were compared with those of other testers, who used five
kits with trays that fit around their teeth. The Whitestrips were
tops for convenience and comfort and they lightened teeth an average
of three shades. They came in second for whitening, though. (Whitestrips
have received the Good Housekeeping Good Buy Award.)
Colgate Simply White, $15.99. Testers used this brush-on
gel twice a day for 14 days. Teeth were lightened one to three
shades. Testers found it hard to keep their mouth open for 30
seconds after applying, though new directions say this is not
needed.
Third-Place Whiteners
Teeth-whitening gums, Trident White and Aquafresh, each lightened
teeth up to one shade.Twelve testers chewed one of six gums four
times a day for six weeks.
Trident White and Aquafresh Whitening Dental Gum
were best. Each whitened teeth up to one shade (for two testers).
Each of the gums has a different whitening ingredient. Price:
$1.50 to $3.29 per pack.
Reference
Source 104
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