Measuring success in toothbrush design - an opinion and debate of the concepts

Authors
Citation
M. Addy, Measuring success in toothbrush design - an opinion and debate of the concepts, INT DENT J, 48(5), 1998, pp. 509-518
Citations number
70
Categorie Soggetti
Dentistry/Oral Surgery & Medicine
Journal title
INTERNATIONAL DENTAL JOURNAL
ISSN journal
00206539 → ACNP
Volume
48
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Supplement
1
Pages
509 - 518
Database
ISI
SICI code
0020-6539(199810)48:5<509:MSITD->2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Toothbrushes date back nearly 1000 years, although the forerunners of today 's brushes were developed in the 1930s. Ideally toothbrushes should be desi gned to promote optimum plaque removal with minimum adverse effects to the hard and soft tissues. Unlike the development of other oral hygiene product s, notably toothpaste and mouthrinses, there appears to have been no debate of how best to evaluate the safety and efficacy of toothbrushes except per haps in respect of filament stiffness. Even here there has been little cons ideration of the interplay of toothbrushes with toothpaste for safety and e fficacy, a factor complicated by the multi-factorial aetiology of tooth wea r and gingival recession. This review considers present and possible future laboratory and clinical methodologies whereby toothbrushes could be assess ed for safety and efficacy. To date, for the most part, studies have concen trated on brush comparisons. This approach cannot be criticised since studi es, in the main, have conformed with scientific guidelines. However, it has achieved little except to emphasise that the major variable to safety and more particularly efficacy is the brusher and not the brush. A proposal is pat forward that minimum standards for toothbrush safety and efficacy based on laboratory and clinical experiments be considered.