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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: bears + cavity + fight  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/24/2008)


Daily Mail
Gummy Bears Join Cavity Fight
Washington Post, United States -
"Based on our findings, it is feasible to develop a clinical trial of a gummy-based (cavity) prevention program. Such a study is now being carried out in ...
Enhanced Gummy Bears Fight Cavities WebMD
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Study: Gummy Bears Could Help Fight Cavities
AHN - 6 minutes ago
Seattle, Washington (AHN) - Gummy bears made with a sugar substitute could make cavity-causing bacteria keep away, researchers said. ...
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RealityTVWebsite.com, IN - Jul 23, 2008
Paleontologists look deep into the brain cavity to give science new insight into their behavior, then by studying the behaviors of modern animals, ...
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RINF.COM, UK - Jun 27, 2008
He believes that it is a ?key means of tackling tooth decay? ? despite the fact that no scientific evidence bears this out, and much other evidence has ...
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American Chronicle, CA - Jul 23, 2008
On the ground appeared the blue flowers of the "Man" or "Himbah," a shrub resembling a potatoe: it bears a gay yellow apple full of brown seeds which is not ...

Washington City Paper
Million-Dollar Man Root
Washington City Paper, DC - Jun 25, 2008
Each wild root represents hours and hours of hiking up and down heavily forested, bear-infested mountains squinting into the underbrush. ...
Will the Real Theory of Evolution Please Stand Up?
Scoop.co.nz, New Zealand - Jul 6, 2008
When multicellularity emerged, new physics was brought to bear on the formation of organisms. It?s not that these physical processes didn?t exist before ...
Source: Google News

THURSDAY, July 24 (HealthDay News) -- Gummy bears with the sugar substitute xylitol may help prevent tooth decay in children, according to a U.S. study.

Researchers gave children four xylitol-sweetened gummy bears three times a day during school hours. After six weeks, there were significant reductions in the levels of harmful mutans streptococci (MS) bacteria in the children's plaque. MS is known to cause tooth decay.

Xylitol, a naturally-occurring sugar alcohol that's frequently used as a sweetener, has been shown to reduce levels of MS. Xylitol chewing gums are available but aren't considered suitable for younger children.

"For xylitol to be successfully used in oral health promotion programs amongst primary school children, an effective means of delivering xylitol must be identified. Gummy bears would seem to be more ideal than chewing gum," research leader Kiet A. Ly, of the University of Washington, said in a BioMed Central news release.

"Based on our findings, it is feasible to develop a clinical trial of a gummy-based (cavity) prevention program. Such a study is now being carried out in the East Cleveland primary school district," Ly said.

The findings were published in the journal BMC Oral Health.

More information

The American Dental Association has more about tooth decay.


 

 
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