Tooth Whitening Akron OH

That odd fizzing on my teeth was the hydrogen peroxide breaking down into oxygen and water. The oxygen immediately penetrated my tooth enamel and bonded to the stain molecules, lifting them and whitening my teeth.

John T Nabors, DDS
(330) 253-3106
157 W Cedar St Ste 212
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

Data Provided by:
Victor A Mungo, DDS
(330) 376-3425
7 W Bowery St Ste 501
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

Data Provided by:
James D George, DDS
(330) 376-9424
411 Wolf Ledges Pkwy
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

Data Provided by:
Steven Q Paris, DDS
(330) 434-2588
550 E Market St Ste 108
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

Data Provided by:
Adib Alsouss, DDS
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

Data Provided by:
Dale M Leonhardt, DDS
(330) 762-8606
585 W Exchange St
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

Data Provided by:
Loren Petry, D.D.S.
508 E. Exchange St.
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry
Office Hours
Monday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Tuesday: 12:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday: 5:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Thursday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Saturday: - 5:00 PM
Sunday: -
PracticeName
Petry and Petry, D.D.S., Inc.

Data Provided by:
Ryan Walton, D.D.S.
508 E. Exchange St.
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry
Office Hours
Monday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Tuesday: 12:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday: 5:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Thursday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Saturday: - 5:00 PM
Sunday: -
PracticeName
Petry and Petry, D.D.S., Inc.

Data Provided by:
Ana Kromhout, DDS
(330) 733-7911
411 Wolf Ledges Pkwy
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

Data Provided by:
Paul Alfred Knoderer, DDS
(330) 376-9622
801 Grant St
Akron, OH
Specialties
General Dentistry

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Natural Beauty - Worry-free Tooth Whitening

Provided by: 

By Sharon Epel

It’s the end of the day, and I’m standing in front of my bathroom mirror, painting my teeth. I dip a dainty brush into a small bottle and carefully stroke each yellowing incisor. The almost tasteless white gel fizzes up over my bared teeth, and just as quickly dissipates. I resist the urge to rinse—per the instructions on that petite bottle. But just before I switch off the bathroom light, it occurs to me that I have no idea what I’ve left to sit overnight on my teeth.

I grab the bottle again, seeking reassurance, but what I read on the label offers none: glycerin, carbopol, sodium phosphate, phosphoric acid, and—wait a minute—hydrogen peroxide. Isn’t that a free radical, one of those dangerously unmoored molecules linked to cancer and many other diseases? Could I be unwittingly releasing toxins into my body? I quickly rinse my defenseless teeth, directions be damned. Forget cleaner, brighter teeth—what am I doing to my health?

The answer surprised me. Sure, the mainstream American Dental Association okays the use of brighteners, citing research on their safety and effectiveness. But the happier news is that holistic dentists, whom you’d expect to be wary, are bullish on them, too. Not only is it absolutely safe to use teeth-bleaching products as directed, they say, but most of these dentists offer their patients the same whitening procedures.

“A lot of people are so darn skeptical of so many modalities in dentistry, and by all rights they should be,” says James Medlock, a holistic dentist in West Palm Beach. “But bleaching is one technique you don’t need to worry about. It’s hypoallergenic and very safe, too.” Victor Zeines, the holistic dentist who created the Natural Dentist line, agrees. He finds peroxide-based whiteners so effective and safe that he hasn’t bothered to develop an alternative. “Bleaching is one of the few harmless things that have come out of conventional dentistry,” he says.

Here’s why: That odd fizzing on my teeth was the hydrogen peroxide breaking down into oxygen and water. The oxygen immediately penetrated my tooth enamel and bonded to the stain molecules, lifting them and whitening my teeth. The whole process takes no longer than an instant, which explains why most peroxide-based bleaching systems require repeated applications to be effective. But the speed also explains why they’re harmless—the peroxide oxidizes and dissipates too quickly to enter the bloodstream.

“Hydrogen peroxide doesn’t remain a free radical for long because it binds so quickly with the stain molecules,” says Walter Jess Clifford, of Clifford Materials Reactivity Testing, a Colorado Springs firm that tests dental materials for immune and allergic reactions. “The mouth doesn’t absorb enough of these very weak free radicals to make a hill of beans of a difference.”

This is good news, even for those who don’t stay up at night reading ingredient labels. In the last five years, tooth whitening in this country has increased...

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