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Efficacy of a sonic toothbrush on plaque removal—A video-controlled explorative clinical trial

Author

Listed:
  • Nadine Schlueter
  • Sarah Fiedler
  • Maxi Mueller
  • Clemens Walter
  • Julia C Difloe-Geisert
  • Kirstin Vach
  • Carolina Ganss

Abstract

Clinical studies on the efficacy of sonic toothbrushes show inconsistent results, most studies have been conducted without sufficient supervision of appropriate toothbrush usage. Aims of the explorative clinical trial were therefore to investigate whether the usage of an activated sonic toothbrush reduces plaque more effectively than an inactivated one used as a manual toothbrush, and to which extent the correct use of such toothbrush plays a role in its efficacy. The clinical trial was designed as a video-controlled interventional study. Thirty participants (mean (±SD) age 22.9 (±2.5) years) were included, areas of interest were the buccal surfaces of the upper premolars and the first molar (partial mouth recording). Toothbrushing was performed without toothpaste in a single brushing exercise under four different conditions: switched off, habitually used as manual toothbrush, no instruction; switched on, habitually used as powered toothbrush, no instruction; switched off, used as manual toothbrush, instruction in the Modified Bass Technique; switched on, used as powered toothbrush, instruction in a specific technique for sonic toothbrushes. Brushing performance was controlled by videotaping, plaque was assessed at baseline (after 4 days without toothbrushing) using the Rustogi modified Navy-Plaque-Index and planimetry. Main study results were that plaque decreased distinctly after habitual brushing regardless of using the sonic brush in ON or OFF mode (p for all comparisons

Suggested Citation

  • Nadine Schlueter & Sarah Fiedler & Maxi Mueller & Clemens Walter & Julia C Difloe-Geisert & Kirstin Vach & Carolina Ganss, 2021. "Efficacy of a sonic toothbrush on plaque removal—A video-controlled explorative clinical trial," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 16(12), pages 1-16, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0261496
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261496
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