
Three toothbrushes
The 'toothbrush' is an instrument used to clean
teeth, consisting of a small
brush on a handle.
Toothpaste, often containing
fluoride, is commonly added to a toothbrush to aid in cleaning. Toothbrushes are offered with varying textures of bristles, and come in many different sizes and forms. Most
dentists recommend using a toothbrush labelled "Soft", since firmer bristled toothbrushes can damage
tooth enamel and irritate
gums as indicated by the
American Dental Association. Toothbrushes are often made from
synthetic fibers, although natural toothbrushes are also known in many parts of the world.
History
A variety of
oral hygiene measures have been used since before recorded history. This has been verified by various excavations done all over the world, in which
toothpicks,
chewsticks, tree
twigs, strips of
linen, bird
feathers, animal
bones and
porcupine quills were recovered. The first modern idea of a toothbrush is believed to have been invented in
China around 1600. However, many other peoples used different forms of toothbrushes.
Ancient Indian medicine has used the
neem tree and its products to create toothbrushes and similar products for millennia. In the
Muslim world, the
miswak, or ''siwak'', made from a twig or root with
antiseptic properties is widely used. Rubbing
baking soda or
chalk against the teeth was also common.

A photo from
1899 showing the use of toothbrush.
William Addis of
England is credited with creating the first mass-produced toothbrush in
1780. In 1770 he had been placed in jail for causing a riot. While in prison, he decided that the method for teeth brushing of the time – rubbing a
rag on one's teeth with
soot and
salt – could be improved. So he took a small animal
bone, drilled small holes in it, obtained some bristles from a guard, tied them in tufts, then passed the bristles through the holes on the bone and glued them.
The first
patent for a toothbrush was by H. N. Wadsworth in
1850 in the
United States, but mass production of the product in America only started in
1885. The rather advanced design had a bone handle with holes bored into it for the Siberian Boar hair bristles.
Boar wasn't an ideal material; it retained
bacteria, it didn't dry well, and the bristles would often fall out of the brush. It wasn't until
World War II, however, that the concept of brushing teeth really caught on in the U.S., in partly because it was part of American soldiers' regular daily duty to clean their teeth. It was a practice that they brought back to their home life after the conclusion of the war.

A child being shown how to use a toothbrush.
Natural bristles (from animal
hair) were replaced by
synthetic fibers, usually
nylon, by
DuPont in
1938. The first nylon bristle toothbrush, made with nylon yarn, went on sale on
February 24,
1938. The first
electric toothbrush, the Broxodent, was introduced by the Bristol-Myers Company (now
Bristol-Myers Squibb) at the centennial of the American Dental Association in
1959.
In January
2003, the toothbrush was selected as the number one invention
Americans could not live without, beating out the
automobile,
computer,
cell phone, and
microwave oven, according to the
Lemelson-
MIT Invention Index.
[1]
Electric toothbrushes
Main articles: Electric toothbrush

Electric toothbrush (with charger)
The first electric toothbrush was developed in
1939 in
Scotland, but did not appear on the open market until the
1960s, when it was marketed as the
Broxodent in the
United States by
Squibb. In
1961,
General Electric introduced a rechargeable cordless toothbrush that moved up and down when activated.
In
1987, the first rotary action toothbrush for home use, the Interplak, appeared in shops for the general public. There are currently many different varieties of model that use this mechanism. Research shows that they tend to be somewhat (but not extremely) more effective at removing
plaque and preventing
gingival bleeding than manual toothbrushes and vibrating toothbrushes.
See also
★
Oral hygiene
★
Dental floss
★
Toothpaste
★
Chewable toothbrush
★
Electric toothbrush
★
Miswak
★
Hypuene
External links
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American Dental Association - Toothbrushing
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tooth brush Information on history of the tooth brush.
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tooth brush ADA Information on history of the tooth brush.
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Footnote of History: The Toothbrush
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CNN: Toothbrush Trounces Car as Top Invention
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Toothbrush History from Toothbrush Express
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BBC h2g2 The History of Toothpaste and Toothbrushes
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Animated-Teeth.com's page on conventional rotary electric toothbrushes