New Molecule for Teeth without Dental Cavities
New research surfaces that there is a special molecule which is called “Keep 32”, and this molecule will help maintaining healthy teeth.
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How many teeth does a healthy person have? 32, that’s correct. This is the number of teeth a healthy person should have, but with today’s sugary foods boom, we are happy we can maintain about 20 teeth healthy in our mouths.
New research surfaces that there is a special molecule which is called “Keep 32”, and this molecule will help maintaining healthy teeth.
This molecule can help keeping all of the 32 teeth healthy, without any dental cavities or other major dental problems. Keep 32 has been designed by researchers from Chile.
They have performed numerous lab tests and noticed that the molecule was able to eliminate successfully all the bacteria responsible for dental cavities formation. It only took about 1 minute until all these harmful bacteria were annihilated from the mouth.
The very first bacterium that was targeted is called streptococcus mutans, which is a bacterium that transforms sugars into lactic acid which in turn starts attacking the enamel of the tooth.
After the tooth enamel is eroded, dental cavities start forming. When the Streptococcus Mutans does not exist, cavities do not exist either!
It took researchers well over 7 years of in depth studies and tests to develop this special molecule that eradicated the bacteria from the mouth. This is an extremely safe and efficient molecule, and in the next 1.5 years we will see it marketed too.
If human tests show just as successful as lab tests, the Keep32 will become an extremely important chemical contained within mouthwashes, toothpastes and all other oral health hygiene products.
What is even more interesting, researchers would like to see this special molecule being licensed to all the major candy and sugary treats companies. Thus, a chewy caramel will not represent an imminent threat to teeth!
Cadbury’s, Hershey’s and other such great companies will be able to bring to the market much healthier sweets from now on, if the Keep32 becomes a main ingredient.
Tooth decay will not be caused by sticky caramels and toffees, and it seems that parents will have to invent some other excuse for why caramels are not good for the teeth…because the chewy treats will not cause dental decays
Categories: Dental News
Topics: Tags: bacterium, caramel, cavities, decay, dental, dental cavities, dental decay, dental problem, dental problems, harmful bacteria




Good Morning,
Remember the adage, “there is no panacea”? The patient, or for that matter
any person with dentition should be advised that there are at least five strains of S. Mutans. It is improbable that there is a treatment that can devitalize only those strains of these bacterium and not be deleterious to other beneficial bacterium in situ.