Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

WATCH: World's First Automatic Toothbrush Can Save Up To 100 Days Of Your Life

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Jul, 2017 01:01 PM
    Technology is changing every aspect of our lives and apparently tooth brushing is no exception. Amabrush, the world's first automatic toothbrush promises to clean your pearly whites in just 10 seconds, with no effort required on your part.
     
     
    You may never have thought about it before, but you lose tens of hours a year just brushing your teeth. A team of biotech engineers and dental care visionaries want to change that with the help of technology. 
     
     
    Their seemingly-revolutionary invention, called Amabrush, looks more like a rubbery mouth-guard than a toothbrush, but promises to clean all your teeth thoroughly, in only 10 seconds, using vibrations created by a small motor, rather than repeated hand motion.
     
     
     
    Amabrush consists of two major components - a soft mouthpiece that goes into your mouth, and a "handpiece" that contains the motor and a micro-pump. The mouthpiece is made of antibacterial silicone that allegedly kills 99.99% of bacteria, all by itself. But that's not all. 
     
     
     
     
    The flexible mouth-guard-like device also dispenses bespoke toothpaste through a series of micro-channels, and is lined with soft bristles that clean your teeth all at once. All you have to do is press a button on the handpiece and just wait 10 seconds for the device to do all the work. Once it's done, you can rinse your mouth as you usually do.
     
     
     
    The automatic toothbrush uses special toothpaste capsules that connect to the handpiece. They cost $3.40 and are supposed to last about a month, if you use the Amabrsh two times a day. Like normal toothbrushes, the silicone mouthpiece should be changed every 3 - 6 months, for optimal results. The price for a replacement is $7.
     
     
     
    To create the silicone mouthpiece, the makers of Amabrush analyzed 2,000 jaws of both men and women, to come up with a once size-fits all design. They claim that any small differences in jaw size are smoothed out by the soft material, so the device fits any jaw with no abnormal teeth displacements.
     
     
     
    The Amabrush handpiece, which contains a motor and a micro-pump for the toothpaste, "creates strong vibrations with an amplitude of 9.5G to oscillate the bristles and clean your teeth. A clever algorithm ensures the generation of different vibrations. This results in a coordinated movement of the bristles, which are designed to have different resonant frequencies."
     
     
     
    The device requires charging, but the good news is that a single charge is supposed to last for 28 brushing session, which comes out to about two weeks of two daily uses. It also comes with a low-energy wireless charging module (Qi), which means you can also use your smartphone's wireless charging station.
     
     
    "Amabrush can brush your teeth in just 10 seconds, because all your teeth are cleaned simultaneously," the creators of the device claim. "Even in this 10 seconds, every tooth surface is cleaned longer compared with common toothbrushes. 
     
     
    If you brush your teeth for the recommended 120 seconds with a regular toothbrush (manual or electric), every surface gets brushed for just 1.25 seconds (given the fact that you have 32 teeth and every teeth has three surfaces). Amabrush brushes all your surfaces for whole 10 seconds. This means: every tooth surface gets brushed 8x longer and the total toothbrushing duration is 12x quicker."
     
     
    People have apparently been waiting for something like this, because Amabrush reached its crowdfunding goal of 50,000 Euros in just one hour. With 25 days tog until deadline, it has already managed to raise a whopping 710,000 Euros ($808,000).
     
     
    The Amabrush will be commercially available, for a price of $90, in December 2017.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Here's What You Should Avoid For Peaceful Flight

    Here's What You Should Avoid For Peaceful Flight
    They say it's not the destination but the journey that makes the travel worthwhile, but avid travellers will know that's not always the case when it comes to flying.

    Here's What You Should Avoid For Peaceful Flight

    Dangling Between Cliffs, Daredevil Woman Swallowed By 40-foot Wave

    Dangling Between Cliffs, Daredevil Woman Swallowed By 40-foot Wave
    A daredevil attempting to slackline across a 31-metre gap between two cliffs was almost washed out to sea when a freak 40-foot wave smashed into her – and the brush with death was caught on camera.

    Dangling Between Cliffs, Daredevil Woman Swallowed By 40-foot Wave

    Indian-American Student Pranay Varada Wins National Geographic Bee Contest

    Indian-American Student Pranay Varada Wins National Geographic Bee Contest
    Pranay Varada, the 14-year-old Indian-American student, has won the prestigious USD 50,000 National Geographic Bee competition

    Indian-American Student Pranay Varada Wins National Geographic Bee Contest

    Of Patiala Pegs And American Whiskey: Cocktails To Savour

    Of Patiala Pegs And American Whiskey: Cocktails To Savour
    Fresh ginger juice mixed with lime juice, orgeat syrup, pineapple juice and Tennessee whiskey, shaken well with lots of crushed ice and what you have in hand is a great "Ginger Baker" drink served in a martini glass.

    Of Patiala Pegs And American Whiskey: Cocktails To Savour

    MasterChef 2017: Pakistani-Kashmiri Recipes Win MasterChef For Saliha Ahmed

    MasterChef 2017: Pakistani-Kashmiri Recipes Win MasterChef For Saliha Ahmed
    Trolls targeted the doctor’s Pakistini heritage and fusion cooking style

    MasterChef 2017: Pakistani-Kashmiri Recipes Win MasterChef For Saliha Ahmed

    Chandigarh's Once-Beautiful Sukhna Lake Goes Dry, Shrunk by 57%

    Chandigarh's Once-Beautiful Sukhna Lake Goes Dry, Shrunk by 57%
      In just under six decades, the area under water of the scenic lake, which has the Kasauli Hills and lower Himalayas in the backdrop, has shrunk by nearly 57 per cent.

    Chandigarh's Once-Beautiful Sukhna Lake Goes Dry, Shrunk by 57%