New mouthwash targeting harmful bacteria may render tooth decay a thing of the past

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Wed, 23 Nov 2011 14:33:38 GMT  <== Science/Technology ==> 

Thomas Mitchell at UCLA Health System - Wenyuan Shi of the UCLA School of Dentistry has done a small study of a targeted antimicrobial therapy which kills Streptococcus mutans, the "principal cause of tooth decay and cavities." Goes into FDA trials in March of 2012.

Shi's Sm STAMP C16G2 investigational drug, tested in the clinical study, acts as a sort of "smart bomb," eliminating only the harmful bacteria and remaining effective for an extended period.

...

"With this new antimicrobial technology, we have the prospect of actually wiping out tooth decay in our lifetime," said Shi, who noted that this work may lay the foundation for developing additional target-specific "smart bomb" antimicrobials to combat other diseases.

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The drug should make

Submitted by da99 on Sat, 26 Nov 2011 04:59:17 GMT

The drug should make billions and help people avoid learning about Vitamin D deficiency and other boring stuff. This is one more example of trying to engineer an expensive, patent-able drug when cheap, natural molecules can do the job.

Try 10,000+ iu of Vitamin D3 daily. Allicin also kills cavity causing bacteria. Many man-made anti-biotics lose their effectiveness over time. Allicin, however, never stops working, even after centuries of being available.
Google:
bill sardi tooth decay
allicin kills tooth

Non-industrial people living in huts often have great teeth through sun exposure (vitamin D production) and avoiding an American diet oozing with artificial sweeteners.

Notice how they ignore mentioning fluoride is bad for teeth: "... it will be the first such anti–dental caries drug since fluoride was licensed nearly 60 years ago." Like many FDA approved drugs, the side-effects will probably become known around the time of the class-action lawsuits.

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