THE TOOTHBRUSH: One of the most essential, efficient tools of modern society! But as technology continues to evolve, patients consistently ask us whether it is better to use an electric toothbrush or a manual one.
According to Consumer Reports dental adviser Jay W. Friedman, D.D.S., M.P.H., if you don’t currently have gingivitis, “it really doesn’t matter which brush you use.” And in terms of plaque, “we really don’t know that it matters if a little more or less plaque is removed,” he says. An electric toothbrush may help, however, if you have arthritis or a dexterity problem that makes thorough brushing difficult, Friedman notes.
Whichever toothbrush you decide to use, don’t get carried away with brushing. “Excessive brushing with manual or electric has its risks,” Friedman says. “Too much pressure and too frequent brushing can abrade enamel, or the root if the gum has receded.” This abrasion, he says, can cause teeth to become hypersensitive to hot and/or cold.
It is important to point out, however, that electric tooth brushes are growing in popularity. Some of them are, notably, kid-friendly: The toothbrush handle may be the shape of a racing car, a mermaid, a cell phone, or its color may resemble army camouflage.
Many patients are now asking their dentists about these mechanical tools so much that the American Dental Association (ADA) has issued several news releases on the matter.
The ADA agrees with the Cochrane findings that manual toothbrushes can be just as effective as powered ones. The key to preventing tooth decay, say the ADA experts, lies in the way a toothbrush, electric or manual, is used.
“If you are a wonderful brusher and a wonderful flosser, then the manual toothbrushes are just great,” says Kimberly Harms, DDS, an ADA consumer advisor. However, she says powered devices can help people who have trouble physically moving their brushes around their mouth to clean all teeth surfaces. These may include anyone with a motor disability or arthritis.
https://www.dentalcare.com/en-us/research/research-database-landing
http://www.webmd.com/oral-health/news/20050419/study-advantage-seen-in-electric-toothbrushes
For all your dental health needs, including guidance on which type of tooth brush would be better for you, Dr. Guerra is here for you. Call us to schedule an appointment with Dr. Adrian Guerra, DDS at our North Palm Beach office at 561-844-6146.
According to the ADA, wealthy Europeans in the Middle Ages used twigs made of sweet-smelling wood to clean their teeth. Then, in 1498, the emperor of China developed a device with hog bristles placed in a bone handle. This type of toothbrush became so popular that in Europe even the common folk used it. The price of hog bristles was so steep, however, that a whole family would share the same toothbrush to cut costs. As you are no doubt aware, modern society’s obsession with cleanliness has made it unthinkable to share toothbrushes in modern times.
The modern toothbrush as we know it today was invented in the late 1930s. Several updates and upgrades have been added to the toothbrush of that era, but the original concept has never changed. Yet in the 1990s, electric toothbrushes came to be a popular alternative to the traditional, manual style. Is one of these toothbrushes “better” than the other?