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Healthy Kids
Cavity fighter may brush fluoride
aside
There is no doubt that fluoride helps fight cavities, but oral
biologist Dr. Israel Kleinberg has developed what he believes is a
better cavity-fighting substance and he now has evidence to
support his theory.
The results from a two-year study of the substance called
CaviStat suggest that children who brushed with the
bacteria-fighting substance had 96 percent fewer cavities than those
who used a common fluoride paste.
"CaviStat skunked fluoride," said Kleinberg of Stony Brook, N.Y.,
who was to present the findings in June at the International
Association for Dental Research in Sweden.
Kleinberg is chairman of oral biology and pathology at Stony
Brook University and has spent his 36-year career unraveling the
infectious disease process that leads to tooth decay. With 300
different types of bacteria crowding the mouth, many bacteria clump
into plaque that sticks to the tooth's surface. Sugar and
carbohydrates from food interact with this bacteria to form acid,
which dissolves the tooth's enamel. With enamel chipping away,
bacteria have room to invade the tooth. Hence, a cavity.
Decades ago, Kleinberg found in saliva a number of peptides that
interact with bacteria and plaque. One peptide in particular
arginine protects teeth from bacterial damage. It works by
neutralizing acids. Kleinberg also identified another compound in
saliva called precipitin that pulls together calcium and phosphate.
CaviStat is part calcium builder and part bad-bacteria blocker.
"This substance shows a lot of promise," said David Pashley, a
regents professor of oral biology at the Medical College of Georgia
in Augusta. "The Stony Brook scientists are very rigorous in their
studies."
Stony Brook partnered with scientists at Venezuela's Central
University in Caracas to test the compound in a double-blind trial
against fluoride. Almost 725 Venezuelan children were divided into
two groups to receive either CaviStat or a fluoride toothpaste to be
used three times a day. Each brushing lasted a minute, followed by a
30-second rinse.
The children who brushed with the CaviStat paste had
significantly fewer cavities after the first year, and the
scientists even saw a reversal of tooth decay. By the second year,
the fluoride group had almost twice the number of cavities,
Kleinberg said.
The study was funded by Ortek Therapeutics, a company based in
Roslyn Heights, N.Y., that has been developing Kleinberg's findings
for more than a decade.
Dental experts had hoped that fluoride, a mineral, would end
tooth decay. Now that fluoride is in toothpastes and in 70 percent
of the country's water supplies, cavity rates are down about
30percent, compared with rates before fluoride's widespread use.
"We think we have something that is much better," said Kleinberg.
Last year, the Food and Drug Administration approved a CaviStat
polishing paste for dental offices to be used for the treatment of
tooth sensitivity, a problem for millions of Americans. Now, the
company is working on a paste that people can use at home for tooth
sensitivity, said Mitch Goldberg of Ortek.
In time, Kleinberg says that he envisions a series of
bacteria-fighting drinks, candy, gum and toothpaste designed to
fight cavities. |