January 2013
Happy New Year. And what better way to start the year than with a
success story. Tooth whitening is possible, if you have a salicylate
intolerance or sensitivity.
Sally's Take-home Teeth Whitening system success story
This worked for Sally, at a time when her salicylate sensitivity was under control
by eating carefully and using only sal free health and beauty products
Recent
major surgeries required the taking of various medications over a long
period of time. One of the side-effects was a noticeable increase in
teeth staining. Not pleasing at all, and with a salicylate
intolerance/sensitivity, could Sally do anything about it?
Initial
research was not at all encouraging. Products involved in the tooth
whitening process use salicylate ingredients, with flavours like mint
featuring strongly.
Fortunately, Sally has an excellent dentist
www.justsmile.co.nz
who uses unflavoured products for her dental visits and to her joy, after
considerable investigation, a custom-made take-home kit system that
appears to be salicylate free was found.
In preparation for the
whitening process, the dentist made an impression of Sally's upper and lower
teeth using uncoloured Vynal Polysiloxaine, a very rapid setting
non-flavoured impression material. The impressions were filled with
plaster to create a cast, on which the whitening trays were made with
liquid plastic. These took a couple of days.
The product Sally used was, 'regular Opalescence tooth whitening systems PF35%'
www.ultradent.com. The tooth whitening purpose-made zipped kit bag consisted of the two
custom-made teeth covering trays, 16 syringes of non-flavoured bleaching
gel and an instruction booklet. Sally kept the syringes in the fridge.
Each
morning after cleaning her teeth, using a third of a syringe Sally applied a
small drop of gel inside each tooth impression in both trays, placed
these over her teeth and left them there for 30 minutes. During this
time, Sally usually had a shower, got dressed and did her make-up. But this
could be done at any time of the day to suit. After each whitening
session, she removed and rinsed the trays carefully with warm water. Sally
also rinsed her mouth, being careful as instructed, not to swallow any of
the gel.
Each night after cleaning her teeth with flavourless
floss and her own salicylate free toothpaste, Sally dabbed some vanilla
flavoured *GC Tooth Mousse on her first finger and rubbed this over her
teeth. Containing calcium and phosphate, "in a special milk-derived
protein called RECALDENTtm (CPP-ACP)", this replaces lost minerals from
the tooth surface.
She repeated this procedure for 48 days, but you
may achieve the level of whitening you desire sooner. Sally absolutely
thrilled to bits with the result.
*
GC
Tooth Mousse is "derived from milk casein and is edible, so can be
swallowed, but would not be good for people with milk protein allergies
or sensitivity to benzoate preservatives". It "comes from the milk of
finest Australian and New Zealand cows".