Dentifrice

Dentifrices, including toothpowder and toothpaste, are agents used along with a toothbrush to aid in removal of dental plaque. They are supplied in paste, powder or gel.[1] Many dentifrices have been produced over the years, some focusing on marketing strategies to sell products, such as offering whitening capabilities. The most essential dentifrice recommended by dentists is toothpaste which is used in conjunction with a toothbrush to help remove food debris and dental plaque. Dentifrice is also the French word for toothpaste.

Botica Iturbide brand tooth powder (early 20th century, Mexico) from the permanent collection of the Museo del Objeto del Objeto

Types

Toothpaste

Toothpaste is a dentifrice used in conjunction with a toothbrush to help maintain oral hygiene. The essential components are an abrasive, binder, surfactant and humectant. Other ingredients are also used. The main purpose of the paste is to help remove debris and plaque with some marketed to serve accessory functions such as breath freshening and teeth whitening.

Tooth powder

Red tooth powder from India

Tooth powder was historically used among the Romans to clean and whiten teeth, to fix them when loose, to strengthen the gums, and to assuage toothache.[2][3][4] They made tooth powder from a variety of substances, such as the bones, hoofs, and horns of certain animals;[2] crabs; oyster[5] and murex shells; and egg-shells. These ingredients were reduced to a fine powder, sometimes after having been previously burnt.[2][5] Some versions contained honey,[5] ground myrrh, nitre,[3] salt,[4] and hartshorn, which would be added after the initial powdering process. Pliny the Elder reported the use of pounded pumice as a dentifrice.[6] Arguably the best-known mention of tooth care among the Romans is found in a letter by Apuleius, who complains that using tooth powder is nothing to be ashamed of, especially compared to the "utterly repulsive things they do in Hispania (now Spain)." Apuleius quotes Catullus in saying that he would be using his own urine "to brush his teeth and his red gums."[7]

By 1924, diatomaceous earth was mined for tooth powder.[8] In modern times, baking soda has been the most commonly used tooth powder.

The use of powdered substances such as charcoal, brick, and salt for cleaning teeth has been historically widespread in India, particularly in rural areas.[9] Modern tooth powder has been positioned as a cost-effective substitute for toothpaste, as it can be applied with the index finger without requiring use of a toothbrush.[9]

See also

References

  1. "Dentifrice - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics". www.sciencedirect.com. Retrieved 2023-10-18.
  2. Pliny the Elder (1855). "xxviii.49—Remedies for Tooth-ache". The Natural History. Translated by John Bostock and H.T. Riley. London: Taylor and Francis.
  3. Pliny the Elder. "xxxi.46.(10.)—The Various Kinds of Nitrum". The Natural History.
  4. Pliny the Elder. "xxxii.26.—Remedies for Tooth-ache". The Natural History.
  5. Pliny the Elder. "xxxii.21.(6.)—The Various Kinds of Oysters - Fifty-eight Remedies and Observations". The Natural History.
  6. Pliny the Elder. "xxxvi. 42.—PUMICE; NINE REMEDIES". The Natural History.
  7. Smith, William (1875). A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, art. Dentifricium. London: John Murray.
  8. ""Toothpowder Mountain" Built From Shells: Skeletons of Tiny Sea Urchins Piled Up on Bottom of Prehistoric Ocean Supply Industry with Valuable Rock". Popular Mechanics: 209–210. February 1924.
  9. Dogra, Balram (2010). Rural Marketing. Tata McGraw-Hill Education. ISBN 9780070660007.
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