Monday, December 8, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Excess Use Of Toothpaste By Kids Leads To Tooth Decay: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Feb, 2019 01:44 AM

    Many young kids who use toothpaste more than needed are at an increased risk of dental fluorosis when they get older, warns a new study.


    Fluorosis is a condition that affects the teeth caused by overexposure to fluoride during the first eight years of life.


    Fluoride is a mineral found in water and soil. More than 70 years ago, scientists discovered that people whose drinking water naturally had more fluoride also had fewer cavities. That led to addition of fluoride to tap water, toothpaste, mouthwash and other products.


    However, the study showed that when teeth are forming, too much fluoride can lead to tooth streaking or spottiness or dental fluorosis.


    In addition, the study found that although experts recommend no more than a pea-sized amount, about 40 per cent of kids aged three to six used a brush that was full or half-full of toothpaste.


    "Fluoride is a wonderful benefit but it needs to be used carefully," Mary Hayes, pediatric dentist in Chicago was quoted by Daily Mail.


    For the study, the researchers from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention included parents of more than 5,000 kids ages three to 15.


    Although the researchers did not determine how many kids developed streaked or spotty teeth as a result of using too much toothpaste, they recommended children under three are only supposed to use a smear of toothpaste the size of a grain of rice, reported Daily Mail.


    Kids aged three to six should keep it to a pea-sized amount.


    Young kids may push for independence in brushing their teeth, but kids' toothpaste tastes sweet, according to the team.


    "You don't want them eating it like food. We want the parent to be in charge of the toothbrush and the toothpaste," noted Hayes.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Zika Spread Through Sex By Man With No Symptoms

    Zika Spread Through Sex By Man With No Symptoms
      In earlier cases of sexual transmission, the virus was spread by someone who at some point had symptoms.

    Zika Spread Through Sex By Man With No Symptoms

    Scalpel-free Brain Surgery Safe, Effective For Essential Tremor: Researchers

    Scalpel-free Brain Surgery Safe, Effective For Essential Tremor: Researchers
    TORONTO — For years — decades, actually — Noreen Smith couldn't perform the simple actions of everyday living that most of us take for granted: drinking a cup of coffee; writing her name; styling her hair.

    Scalpel-free Brain Surgery Safe, Effective For Essential Tremor: Researchers

    Advocates Call For Changes To Canada's HIV/AIDS Disclosure Law, Call It 'Unfair'

    Advocates Call For Changes To Canada's HIV/AIDS Disclosure Law, Call It 'Unfair'
    TORONTO — The recent arrests of two men accused of failing to disclose their HIV status to their sexual partners have renewed calls for changes to the current legislation that advocates say contributes to the fear and stigma surrounding the disease.

    Advocates Call For Changes To Canada's HIV/AIDS Disclosure Law, Call It 'Unfair'

    If Overweight, Be Friendly With Thinner People

    If Overweight, Be Friendly With Thinner People
      Participants identified the four adults with whom they spent free time most frequently and rated each contact's body mass relative to their own. 

    If Overweight, Be Friendly With Thinner People

    Florida Zika Cases Rise To 25 As Back-to-school Day Nears

      Florida's Department of Health says active transmission has been only happening in a 1-square-mile area encompassing Miami's Wynwood arts district.

    Florida Zika Cases Rise To 25 As Back-to-school Day Nears

    P.E.I. Hamlet Puts Faith In Stompin' Tom Centre, Honouring Its Most Famous Son

    P.E.I. Hamlet Puts Faith In Stompin' Tom Centre, Honouring Its Most Famous Son
    This P.E.I. hamlet has begun work on a gamble: That Canada still loves Stompin' Tom Connors as much as the country-folk legend loved it.

    P.E.I. Hamlet Puts Faith In Stompin' Tom Centre, Honouring Its Most Famous Son