Do You Choose Children's Toothpaste?
"You
tell parents to choose a toothpaste with a fluorine content of 1,000 ppm. They
may not be able to choose. You might as well tell him which brands of
toothpaste you can buy!"
This
paragraph is actually a bit of a shock to Xiaoya. I have been hesitant about
whether to discuss which brand of toothpaste in public. I always feel that
there are suspicions of saying good things about others, and that they are not
good and have doubts about blocking people's money. So I wrote toothpaste
before. In the article, the toothpaste brands inside are covered by their own
standards.
First
look at the fluorine content
Although
fluoride is strictly controversial, as of today, fluoride is still proven to be
good, simple, easy to use and cheap in the stomatology community. Therefore,
the choice of toothpaste is based on fluorine content.
Many
children who advertise that they can swallow toothpaste may not contain
fluoride, so in order to allow children to swallow but lose the protective effect
of fluorine, Xiaoya personally feels quite pity.
When
looking at the toothpaste label, note that "F", "Fluoride",
and "フ ッ 素" all mean fluorine. Units are usually
indicated in ppm. According to internationally accepted standards, 1,000 ppm
fluorine content can be used regardless of age.
It
is worth mentioning that the legal regulations of different countries are
different. For example, the Japanese government stipulates that children's
toothpaste without foaming agents should not contain more than 500 ppm of
fluorine. In Japan, the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare recommends that
children under five years of age use fluoride in toothpaste. The toothpaste in
foam form is 1,000 ppm, and the toothpaste without foaming agent contains 500
ppm.
After
reading the fluorine content, is there anything else to pay attention to?
Before
answering this question, let ’s take a look at the toothpaste on the market and
the ingredients on the outer packaging.
1.
Fluoride, rubber powder, foaming agent, fruit flavor, glycerin.
2.
Fluorine, hexanol, silicone.
3.
Glycosyl trehalose, xylitol, sodium fluoride.
4.
Fluorine, sorbitol, calcium glycerophosphate, vitamin E, abrasives, etc.
5.
Sulacid: sodium fluoride.
Toothpaste
has no problem with these "sugars"
And
parents often ask: "Doctor, my children like to use strawberry flavor
toothpaste, he is sweet, will it be easy to decay?" Sugar-based trehalose,
sorbitol, xylitol, and some spices, These things will make toothpaste a bit
sweet, so that children prefer to brush their teeth with toothpaste.
However,
these "sugars" are of low tooth decay and even have the effect of
preventing tooth decay. Parents don't have to worry that children brush their
teeth with toothpaste.
So
if there is xylitol, sorbitol, or trehalose, these have a plus effect on
preventing tooth decay, instead of helping more and more. So toothpaste is OK
with these "sugars"!
Not
much impact
Picking
toothpaste in general is almost the same, but some parents may still worry that
toothpaste has some other additives, such as abrasives, foaming agents,
triclosan, etc., does it have any effect? Or some manufacturers say that they
have added any patented tooth decay formula, would it be better?
I
think the safety of a thing, besides its nature, how much it is used is also an
important point. To the extent that it is currently recommended to only use
rice grains under the age of 3, the use of toothpaste for children will not be
dangerous. The key to oral cleaning is not toothpaste, but brushing, flossing,
and eating habits.
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