
Interestingly…we found that the answer is YES! We had 8 of our staff members test MYST™, using the toothbrush twice a day over the last three weeks.īrushing your teeth will never be the same! So does it actually do everything that it claims to do? Using a technology called XRT™, or Expansion Radius Technology™ which is supposedly the technology that is used to clean all of your teeth, simultaneously in just 30-seconds, the MYST™ toothbrush almost seems to good to be true. It was by actual dentists and with that said, we figured we would test out the product ourselves.
#MYST DENTAL BRUSH FULL#
MYST™ Toothbrush was created and designed to give your mouth a full dental grade cleaning, in just 30-seconds time. Brush your teeth simultaneously in just 30-seconds? That is what MYST™ claims their product will do…but is it true? Mosby Company, 1948.Can you really clean all of your teeth and your gum line, in just 30-seconds with this revolutionary new toothbrush? This is what we found during our MYST™ toothbrush review. An introduction to the history of dentistry, with medical, dental, chronology & bibliographic data. Extraordinary origins of everyday things.
McGrath, Kimberley A., and Bridget Travers, eds. Upland, Calif., Counterpoint Publications, c1993. Teeth for your lifetime: a complete, easy-to-read, and understandable guide to a lifetime of dental health. The second world almanac book of inventions. "The use of Nature's toothbrush: the chewing stick." Research Reports - National Geographic Society, v.16, 1975: 211-231. (Juvenile).Įlvin-Lewis, Memory and Walter H. Why do we need to brush our teeth? Milwaukee, G. (How Products are Made) - Explains the manufacturing process of the toothbrush. National Public Radio’s Joe Palca looks at toothbrush patents and innovations in design over the years. Shots include troops exercising, troops in the mess hall, and George Washington's dentures. Over appropriate animation and classroom scenes, a narrator/dental officer explains the structure and function of human teeth. (United States War Office, 1945) From the National Library of Medicine, this military training film on dental health was designed for army troops. (George Washington's Ferry Farm and Historic Kenmore) - Dental care has improved greatly in 200 years but the seeds of modern tooth care can certainly be seen when looking back to colonial days. () - This site discusses the history of the toothbrush and toothpaste, including the first electric toothbrush invented in 1939.
Author: Science Reference Section, Library of Congress Related WebsitesĪ Comprehensive History of Dentistry and Dental Care It was marketed by the Squibb company under the name Broxodent.
One of the first electric toothbrushes to hit the American market was in 1960. Mass production of toothbrushes began in America around 1885. Wadsworth, (patent number 18,653,) on Nov. The first American to patent a toothbrush was H. The first mass-produced toothbrush was made by William Addis of Clerkenwald, England, around 1780. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress They became increasingly concerned with the practice of good oral hygiene and quickly adopted the nylon toothbrush. Later, Americans were influenced by the disciplined hygiene habits of soldiers from World War II. The first nylon toothbrush was called Doctor West’s Miracle Toothbrush. The bristles were actually the stiff, coarse hairs taken from the back of a hog’s neck and attached to handles made of bone or bamboo.īoar bristles were used until 1938, when nylon bristles were introduced by Dupont de Nemours.
The bristle toothbrush, similar to the type used today, was not invented until 1498 in China. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Four children being taught the correct use of a toothbrush by a dental hygienist at the Guggenheim Dental Clinic, between 1940-1945. These ‘chew sticks’ were rubbed against the teeth. Ancient civilizations used a “chew stick,” which was a thin twig with a frayed end. However, early forms of the toothbrush have been in existence since 3000 BC. The toothbrush as we know it today was not invented until 1938. Poster from Gellé Frères Perfumers, Avenue de l’Opéra, 6, Paris.