Brushing Dentures with Paste is Best Cleaning Method
SAO PAULO – A new review suggests that brushing removable dentures with a paste product may be the best way to keep them clean.
It was even better than soaking in effervescent or enzyme cleaning solutions, suggests the new review.
Keeping dentures clean and free from plaque build-up can help prevent oral infections and gingivitis, but few clinical studies focus on the best way to clean partial or complete dentures.
This scarcity of studies on real-life patients was surprising, said lead review author
“We need clinical trials,” he said.
In some studies, the denture wearers were in institutions, while other studies involved patients at university dental clinics.
Studies compared different denture cleaning methods to one another or to a placebo.
Cleaning methods included soaking dentures in enzyme solutions, soaking in effervescent solutions, routine brushing with a paste product and a combination of brushing and soaking.
The studies examined the effects of each method on outcomes such as irritation in the mouth or inflammation of the gums and other oral tissue, the presence of bad breath and how much plaque was on the dentures.
Although it is not possible to draw a strong conclusion on what method works best,
“We cannot be pretty sure what the most effective methods for denture cleaning are. But we can infer possibly that brushing can give better results,” he said.
A patient with poor manual dexterity who cannot brush well might be better off using chemical cleaners and soaks, he added.
The new review appears in the latest issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates medical research.
The results of the review are interesting, but might have little effect from a practical standpoint, said
She is in private practice as a prosthodontist in Oklahoma City.
“We give our patients a sheet of instructions and recommend that they mechanically clean the dentures by brushing with dishwashing soap to get the major debris off,” she said.
All dentures should be stored in water or a cleaning solution overnight because dentures should not dry out.
“If they like, patients can soak the dentures in an effervescent solution overnight. You can do both mechanical and chemical, but it is not absolutely necessary,” she added.
Similarly, heating dentures in water or another solution in a microwave oven can cause damage to the dentures, Brackett said.
If using household bleach do so carefully, because it can cause discoloration in gum-coloured portions of dentures.
“We do recommend a solution of water, bleach and Calgon to treat a yeast infection, but that is not something for routine basis,” she said.
Another cleaning method is an ultrasound device that vibrates the water the dentures are in.
Brackett said that battery-operated ultrasound cleaners are available for about 10 dollars, but that the professional models used by prosthodontists’ offices to clean dentures are better.
In her office, dentures undergo ultrasonic cleaning when the patient comes in for an annual check-up, which is advisable both to check for fit and wear and tear on the dentures and to screen for head and neck cancer.
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