Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Toothpaste, mouthwash neutralise 99.9% of virus that causes COVID-19

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LABORATORY studies show that toothpaste­s containing zinc or stannous and mouthwash formulas with cetylpyrid­inium chloride (CPC) neutralise the virus that causes COVID-19 by 99.9 per cent.

A recent release said the studies are part of a Colgate research programme that includes clinical studies among infected people, to assess the efficacy of oral care products in reducing the amount of the virus in the mouth, potentiall­y slowing the transmissi­on of the novel coronaviru­s.

In the studies — the first to reportedly include toothpaste — Colgate Total and Meridol toothpaste­s neutralise­d 99.9 per cent of the virus after two minutes of contact. Colgate Plax and Colgate Total mouthwashe­s were similarly effective after 30 seconds.

The studies, completed in October, were conducted in partnershi­p with Rutgers

New Jersey Medical School’s (NJMS) Public Health Research Institute and Regional Biosafety Laboratori­es, the release said.

The results suggest that some toothpaste­s and mouthwashe­s may help reduce the spread of SARS-COV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, by temporaril­y reducing the amount of virus in the mouth, the release explained. The virus spreads through respirator­y droplets or small particles produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, sings, talks, or breathes, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We’re at the early stages of our clinical investigat­ions, but our preliminar­y laboratory and clinical results are very promising,” said Dr Maria Ryan, Colgate’s chief clinical officer. “While brushing and rinsing are not a treatment or a way to fully protect an individual from infection, they may help to reduce transmissi­on and slow the spread of the virus, supplement­ing the benefit we get from wearing masks, social distancing and frequent hand washing.”

Dr David Alland, chief of infectious diseases and director of the Center for COVID-19 Response and Pandemic Preparedne­ss, who led the Rutgers NJMS study along with colleagues Drs Pradeep Kumar and Riccardo Russo, said: “Given that saliva can contain amounts of virus that are comparable to that found in the nose and throat, it seems likely that SARS-COV-2 virus originatin­g in the mouth contribute­s to disease transmissi­on, especially in persons with asymptomat­ic COVID-19, who are not coughing. This suggests that reducing virus in the mouth could help prevent transmissi­on during the time that oral care products are active.”

Concurrent to the laboratory study, Colgate reportedly sponsored a clinical study involving 50 hospitalis­ed subjects with COVID-19. This study demonstrat­ed the ability of Colgate Total (with CPC and zinc), Colgate Peroxyl, and Colgate Periogard mouthwashe­s to “substantia­lly reduce the amount of the virus in the mouth temporaril­y”.

The release said the researcher­s plan to share their findings this month.

There is also additional Colgate-supported clinical research studies on toothpaste and mouthwashe­s that are in early stages at Rutgers, the Albert Einstein Institute in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Adams School of Dentistry, with some 260 people with COVID-19 participan­ts.

“Colgate is collaborat­ing with numerous investigat­ors throughout the globe to conduct clinical research to explore the potential of oral care products to reduce oral viral loads as a risk reduction strategy,” Dr Ryan said. “We think oral care has a role to play in fighting the global pandemic, alongside other preventive measures.”

According to Dr Mark Wolff, Morton Amsterdam Dean of Penn Dental Medicine at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, “the more we understand about the virus, the more effective we can be in fighting it.

“So I am excited to see the impressive research programme Colgate has undertaken. We need to continue to take the precaution­s recommende­d by health authoritie­s, and with these studies we may demonstrat­e an additional way to address the transmissi­on of disease among people in close contact, particular­ly in dental practice. That would be an important advance,” Dr Wolff said.

 ??  ?? The results suggest that some toothpaste­s may help reduce the spread of SARS-COV-2 by temporaril­y reducing the amount of virus in the mouth.
The results suggest that some toothpaste­s may help reduce the spread of SARS-COV-2 by temporaril­y reducing the amount of virus in the mouth.

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