A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth Whitening

Besides prevention of caries and periodontitis, an increasing number of oral care products focus on teeth whitening. The aim of this review is to summarize and discuss frequently used whitening agents and their efficacy from a chemical viewpoint. Therefore, a comprehensive literature survey on teeth...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matthias Epple, Frederic Meyer, Joachim Enax
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-08-01
Series:Dentistry Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6767/7/3/79
id doaj-28daf2e789864786b27d46b3ebcc70ca
record_format Article
spelling doaj-28daf2e789864786b27d46b3ebcc70ca2020-11-25T02:16:12ZengMDPI AGDentistry Journal2304-67672019-08-01737910.3390/dj7030079dj7030079A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth WhiteningMatthias Epple0Frederic Meyer1Joachim Enax2Inorganic Chemistry and Center for Nanointegration Duisburg-Essen (CeNIDE), University of Duisburg-Essen, Universitaetsstr. 5-7, 45117 Essen, GermanyDr. Kurt Wolff GmbH & Co. KG, Research Department, Johanneswerkstr. 34-36, 33611 Bielefeld, GermanyDr. Kurt Wolff GmbH & Co. KG, Research Department, Johanneswerkstr. 34-36, 33611 Bielefeld, GermanyBesides prevention of caries and periodontitis, an increasing number of oral care products focus on teeth whitening. The aim of this review is to summarize and discuss frequently used whitening agents and their efficacy from a chemical viewpoint. Therefore, a comprehensive literature survey on teeth whitening agents and products was conducted. The current whitening methods are analyzed and discussed from a chemist’s viewpoint. Frequently used whitening agents are abrasives (mechanical removal of stains), antiredeposition agents (prevention of deposition of chromophores), colorants (intended to lead to a white color), proteases (degradation of proteins), peroxides (oxidation of organic chromophores), and surfactants (removal of hydrophobic compounds from tooth surface). In-office bleaching using peroxides is effective, but side effects like tooth sensitivity or a damage of the natural organic matrix of enamel and dentin may occur. The applicability of abrasives in teeth whitening is limited due to potential tooth wear, especially when toothpastes with high RDA values are used. The effect of other whitening agents in vivo is often unclear because of a shortage of placebo-controlled clinical trials.https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6767/7/3/79teethtoothpastewhiteningperoxidesabrasives
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthias Epple
Frederic Meyer
Joachim Enax
spellingShingle Matthias Epple
Frederic Meyer
Joachim Enax
A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth Whitening
Dentistry Journal
teeth
toothpaste
whitening
peroxides
abrasives
author_facet Matthias Epple
Frederic Meyer
Joachim Enax
author_sort Matthias Epple
title A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth Whitening
title_short A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth Whitening
title_full A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth Whitening
title_fullStr A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth Whitening
title_full_unstemmed A Critical Review of Modern Concepts for Teeth Whitening
title_sort critical review of modern concepts for teeth whitening
publisher MDPI AG
series Dentistry Journal
issn 2304-6767
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Besides prevention of caries and periodontitis, an increasing number of oral care products focus on teeth whitening. The aim of this review is to summarize and discuss frequently used whitening agents and their efficacy from a chemical viewpoint. Therefore, a comprehensive literature survey on teeth whitening agents and products was conducted. The current whitening methods are analyzed and discussed from a chemist’s viewpoint. Frequently used whitening agents are abrasives (mechanical removal of stains), antiredeposition agents (prevention of deposition of chromophores), colorants (intended to lead to a white color), proteases (degradation of proteins), peroxides (oxidation of organic chromophores), and surfactants (removal of hydrophobic compounds from tooth surface). In-office bleaching using peroxides is effective, but side effects like tooth sensitivity or a damage of the natural organic matrix of enamel and dentin may occur. The applicability of abrasives in teeth whitening is limited due to potential tooth wear, especially when toothpastes with high RDA values are used. The effect of other whitening agents in vivo is often unclear because of a shortage of placebo-controlled clinical trials.
topic teeth
toothpaste
whitening
peroxides
abrasives
url https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6767/7/3/79
work_keys_str_mv AT matthiasepple acriticalreviewofmodernconceptsforteethwhitening
AT fredericmeyer acriticalreviewofmodernconceptsforteethwhitening
AT joachimenax acriticalreviewofmodernconceptsforteethwhitening
AT matthiasepple criticalreviewofmodernconceptsforteethwhitening
AT fredericmeyer criticalreviewofmodernconceptsforteethwhitening
AT joachimenax criticalreviewofmodernconceptsforteethwhitening
_version_ 1724892056904531968