I've been using cinnamon flavored tooth powder from Eco Dent for many years
with no problems whatsoever.  Cinnamon is strongly anti-bacterial and a
beneficial spice for cancer as well.

 

Bob

 

  _____  

From: Joyce Miller [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, February 12, 2012 3:23 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: tea tree oil, was Re: CS>DMSO cures sensitive teeth roots

 

Sodium Laurel Sulphate should be avoided like the plague! 

There should also be warnings on the toothpastes that use cinnamon to flavor
the toothpaste (according to the woman who cleans my teeth). Ginger, she
said, is fine; cinnamon is not. I don't remember what she said it does to
the teeth, but she chastised one of the reps from a toothpaste company about
bringing them toothpaste with cinnamon, and he said well, that is what
people like. She went right back and told him that the company needs to not
use stuff that can harm the teeth.

In one article, the Journal of the American Dental Association says that
cinnamon can sensitize and irritate the mouth and is highly caustic when
applied directly to our gums. Cinnamon irritates mucus membranes and the
mouth is a mucous membrane. It can cause inflammation in the mouth even
while killing bacteria in the mouth.
http://jada.ada.org/content/126/9/1214.1.full.pdf




-- 
"I feel an earnest and humble desire, and shall till I die, to increase the
stock of harmless cheerfulness" - Charles Dickens. 

http://dearjubilee-joyce.blogspot.com  
www.dearjubilee.com