Colgate Total
Colgate Total
Re: Colgate Total
It has always interested me that toothpastes with "fluoride added" (for what ever reason) are allowed to be sold in areas where fluoride is added to the water coming from a public utility company.
Fluoride in the water - no problem.
Fluoride in toothpaste - no problem.
Put the two of them together and maybe exceed a safe dose ... ...
If you really don't like Colgate (or any other toothpaste with added fluoride) don't bleat about it to us, go and organize a protest about it outside Albertsons, Walmart, or whichever large retailer takes your fancy. Ask why the sell a redundant product which may (please note the "may") harm children using it. See who responds first - the store company, the toothpaste company, the local public health officer, whoever ... .
Try it and see.
Geoff
Re: Colgate Total
I just received this notification in my email this a.m. All these "small doses" add up and just are not good for my m.s./CCSVI
veins. I appreciate the info.
- lyndacarol
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Re: Colgate Total
There have been similar recent warnings about the cumulative effects of ibuprofen in children's Tylenol, cough syrup, and other children's OTC products in which ibuprofen is found. dlynn is right: "All these 'small doses' add up."dlynn wrote:Thanks want2bike,
I just received this notification in my email this a.m. All these "small doses" add up and just are not good for my m.s./CCSVI
veins. I appreciate the info.
Re: Colgate Total
What toothpastes DO NOT have fluoride added?
Re: Colgate Total
I'm assuming that this is NOT a rhetorical question.ElliotB wrote:I believe RO (reverse osmosis) filters out the fluoride (at least I hope it does as I drink from water filtered with one).
What toothpastes DO NOT have fluoride added?
Several:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_c_ ... Caps%2C266
Re: Colgate Total
Re: Colgate Total

Colgate Total is, IMO, sickeningly sweet/bland also.
It sure is great to have choices to choose from, even though too many possible choices can be overwhelming sometimes.
Re: Colgate Total
What does this mean?
Re: Colgate Total
Awareness of Sodium Lauryl Sulfate & Sodium Laureth Sulfate Health Hazards among Users
http://jofamericanscience.org/journals/ ... 35_541.pdf
El-Sharkawy, G. F. (2011). Awareness of Sodium Lauryl Sulfate & Sodium Laureth Sulfate Health Hazards among Users. Journal of American Science, 7(4).
take control of your own health.
pursue optimal self care, with or without a diagnosis.
Re: Colgate Total
Re: Colgate Total
http://www.greenbeaver.com/oral/tootpaste.html
also, fwiw:
Health risks from drinking demineralised water.
http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_hea ... f#page=157
Kozisek, F. (2005). Health risks from drinking demineralised water. Nutrients in Drinking Water, 148-163.
take control of your own health.
pursue optimal self care, with or without a diagnosis.
Re: Colgate Total
want2bike wrote:Even if you are not worried about the fluoride ...
interestingly, in my area the background level is around 0.1-0.15 ppm - not considered protective. in local areas serviced by fluoridated water, the range is 0.5-0.8 ppm.DrGeoff wrote:It has always interested me that toothpastes with "fluoride added" (for what ever reason) are allowed to be sold in areas where fluoride is added to the water coming from a public utility company.
Fluoride in the water - no problem.
Fluoride in toothpaste - no problem.
Put the two of them together and maybe exceed a safe dose ... ...
Geoff
I have read that early work established 1.0 ppm as a cutoff to prevent fluorosis, and that Colorado springs, one of the original sites involved in the development of current fluoridation practice, had a background level of 2.6 ppm. if memory serves, there's an EPA toxicity cutoff of some kind at 4.0 ppm.
toothpaste is usually on the order of 1000-1500 ppm and so I guess absorption via mucous membranes is not sufficient to match 2.0 ppm in water, or we'd all be seeing it in our teeth. I find it more challenging to find good research on effects other than fluorosis, but filtering on current year publications elicited these
interesting variety of recent publications:
http://scholar.google.ca/scholar?as_ylo ... as_sdt=0,5
also, some science related to w2b's original colgate post:
Triclosan: environmental exposure, toxicity and mechanisms of action
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... F05.f01t02?
take control of your own health.
pursue optimal self care, with or without a diagnosis.
- CureOrBust
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Re: Colgate Total

I try to avoid swallowing (ie tap water) fluoride as much as possible. Although I do not think fluoride specifically caused my MS, it sits firmly in the "keep yourself as healthy as possible would help my body minimise its progression", so avoid "poisons"jimmylegs wrote:toothpaste is usually on the order of 1000-1500 ppm and so I guess absorption via mucous membranes is not sufficient to match 2.0 ppm in water, or we'd all be seeing it in our teeth. I find it more challenging to find good research on effects other than fluorosis, but filtering on current year publications elicited these
I always wondered how fluoride actually assists dental health, until about a few months ago on a medical documentary (on TV, not google scholar or such, and have not researched further), some guys explained in passing, that when fluoride has contact with teeth, the normal human tooth enamel undergoes a chemical reaction/change which forms a new substance which is many times stronger against the acid that causes tooth decay. In addition to this, I remembered that in the old days (do not know if they still do this) when you had a "fluoride treatment" at the dentist, it was placed in a mouth guard that you held in your mouth (ie in contact with your teeth) and you were told NOT TO SWALLOW ANY. So logically to me, I would really question if we should be constantly consuming it, or maybe only be using a higher content ADULT toothpaste. I can only think that people wished to avoid poisoning kids who swallowed the very poisonous, heavily flavoured foam in their mouths.
