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AROUND THE WORLD 1: Chocolate Toothpaste
Chocolate Toothpaste? Extract of Tasty Treat Could Fight Tooth Decay, Tulane University Researcher Says
NEW ORLEANS, May 16 For a healthy smile brush between meals, floss regularly and eat plenty of chocolate?
According to Tulane University doctoral candidate Arman Sadeghpour an
extract of cocoa powder that occurs naturally in chocolates, teas, and
other products might be an effective natural alternative to fluoride in
toothpaste. In fact, his research revealed that the cocoa extract was even
more effective than fluoride in fighting cavities.
The extract, a white crystalline powder whose chemical makeup is
similar to caffeine, helps harden teeth enamel, making users less
susceptible to tooth decay. The cocoa extract could offer the first major
innovation to commercial toothpaste since manufacturers began adding
fluoride to toothpaste in 1914.
The extract has been proven effective in the animal model, but it will
probably be another two to four years before the product is approved for
human use and available for sale, Sadeghpour says. But he has already
created a prototype of peppermint flavored toothpaste with the
cavity-fighting cocoa extract added, and his doctoral thesis research
compared the extract side by side to fluoride on the enamel surface of
human teeth.
Sadeghpour's research group included scientists from Tulane, the
University of New Orleans, and Louisiana State University's School of
Dentistry.
Sadeghpour will earn his PhD in bioinformatics and a master's in
computer science from Tulane University on May 19.
Article courtesy of PRNewswire.com
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