Why Alcohol-Free Home Care?
There are several logical and obvious reasons why patients should not
be using mouth rinses that contain alcohol. It is not a coincidence that
nearly 100 percent of the rinses introduced for dental professionals
over the past decade have been alcohol free. Consider the following:
1. Alcohol burns oral tissues.
2. Alcohol dries out oral tissues.
3. Alcohol may shrink composite resins and/or degrade bonding agents
over time.
4. Alcohol may increase the risk of oral and pharyngeal cancer.
5. Alcohol-based rinses are not more effective in eliminating mouth
odors, since alcohol does not directly neutralize the compounds that
cause malodor; mainly VSCs (volatile sulfur compounds).
6. Most alcohol-based rinses also contain colorings/dyes that can darken
or stain teeth.
Let's take a look at all the categories of patients that cannot or should
not use alcohol:
1. Children/teenagers
2. Pregnant women
3. Elderly individuals and/or those on multiple medications (a major
side effect of the most commonly prescribed medications today is xerostomia,
which is an inhibition of salivary flow creating a dry mouth)
4. Substance abusers (do you really know who they are?)
5. Diabetics
6. People with Halitosis
7. Patients that have had cosmetic services and/or restorations (composites,
ceramic crowns, veneers, teeth whitening)
Think about it...almost 100% of us fall into one or more of these categories!
Statistics show that over 1/3 of households have a least one mouth rinse
at home, but the majority of them do not rinse daily; they rinse only
after eating certain foods (i.e. garlic) or before a date or special
event. Learning to incorporate a basic 3-Step system of scrape
the tongue, brush, and rinse will greatly improve long-term oral health.
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