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Two-Minute
Brush Helps
Achieve Cleaner Teeth: Study
Excerpt
By
Alison McCook,
Reuters Health
Although hard work tends to pay
off in other areas of life, forceful toothbrushing appears to
be no better at ridding the mouth of plaque than a medium effort.
A group of European researchers
discovered that the most efficient means of reducing plaque appears
to be brushing for about two minutes at a medium force.
More vigorous teeth cleaning may
actually do more harm than good, said Dr. Peter A. Heasman of
the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. Research suggests that
heavy brushing can damage gums and wear down teeth, both potentially
serious oral health problems, he said.
"Although we found that you have
to brush your teeth reasonably long and hard to get rid of the
harmful plaque which causes dental diseases, our research shows
that once you go beyond a certain point you aren't being any more
effective," Heasman said in a statement.
"You could actually be harming
your gums and possibly your teeth," he added.
Heasman and his colleagues designed
the study, published in the Journal of Clinical Periodontology,
to determine the most efficient way to brush away plaque. Plaque
is a sticky substance that can contain more than 300 species of
bacteria, which adhere to tooth surfaces and produce cavity-causing
acid. Plaque is a leading cause of gum disease.
During the study, Heasman and his
colleagues measured plaque levels in the mouths of 12 people after
they brushed their teeth using four different forces and for four
periods of time -- 30 seconds, 60 seconds, 120 seconds, and 180
seconds.
The study participants brushed
using a power toothbrush, which exerted set forces of between
75 grams and 300 grams. All spent 24 hours without cleaning their
teeth before testing how well each technique stripped their mouths
of plaque.
Heasman said that a force of 75
grams feels much lighter than one of 300 grams. However, he recommended
that people visit their dentist to determine how different brushing
forces feel.
"It is very difficult for a lay
person to differentiate between brushing forces," Heasman told
Reuters Health.
Longer brushing generally appeared
better, but the researchers found that 120 seconds of brushing
was roughly just as effective at removing plaque as longer brushing.
And during those longer sessions, people removed about the same
amount of plaque using a force of 150 grams as when they employed
forces of 225 and 300 grams.
Although different people may require
more or less time to get at all the plaque-ridden nooks and crannies
in their mouth, spending around two minutes brushing your teeth
seems "about right," Heasman said.
And applying a force beyond 150
grams -- somewhere in between light and forceful brushing -- "offered
little benefit to plaque removal," Heasman added.
Furthermore, in toothbrushing,
it is possible to have too much of a good thing, the researcher
said.
"In the short term, gum changes
may become apparent, but in the longer term, tooth wear or toothbrush
abrasion is likely with too abrasive a technique, toothpaste,
brush or force," Heasman said.
SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Periodontology
2003;30:409-413.
Reference
Source 89
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