A Six-Week Clinical Evaluation of the Plaque and Gingivitis Efficacy of an Oscillating-Rotating Power Toothbrush with a Novel Brush Head Utilizing Angled CrissCross ® Bristles Versus a Sonic Toothbrush

2014 
• Objective: To compare the efficacy of an oscillating-rotating power toothbrush with a novel brush head incorporating angled CrissCross ® bristles (Oral-B ® Triumph ® with SmartGuide with Oral-B CrossAction ® brush head) versus a sonic toothbrush (Sonicare ® DiamondClean) for plaque and gingivitis reduction over a six-week period. • Methods: This was a single-center, randomized, examiner-blind, two-treatment, parallel group study involving 65 subjects per group. Subjects presenting with mild-to-moderate gingivitis at Baseline were randomly assigned to either the oscillating-rotating brush or the sonic brush. They were instructed to use their assigned toothbrush and a standard fluoride dentifrice for two minutes twice daily at home for six weeks. Gingivitis and plaque were assessed at Baseline and Week 6 using the Modified Gingival Index (MGI), Gingival Bleeding Index (GBI), and Rustogi Modified Navy Plaque Index (RMNPI). Data were analyzed using an Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA), with baseline as the covariate. Subjects also completed a consumer perception questionnaire to evalu ate their brushing experience. • Results: One-hundred and thirty subjects were enrolled in the study and randomized to treatment. Sixty-four subjects per group completed the trial. Both brushes produced statistically significant reductions in gingivitis and plaque measures at Week 6 relative to Baseline (p < 0.001 for all). The oscillating-rotating brush with the novel brush head demonstrated statistically significantly greater reductions in all gingivitis and plaque measures compared to the sonic toothbrush. The benefits for the oscillating-rotating brush over the sonic brush were 32.6% for gingivitis, 35.4% for gingival bleeding, 32% for number of bleeding sites, 22% for whole mouth plaque, 24.2% for gingival margin plaque, and 33.3% for approximal plaque (p ≤ 0.001 for all measures except gingival mar gin plaque, where p = 0.018). Analysis of the consumer perception questionnaire results showed subjects using the oscillatingrotating brush rated it higher for overall use experience and key attributes related to cleaning, gentleness, and brush head shape/size versus subjects in the sonic brush group. There were no adverse events reported or observed for either brush. • Conclusion: This six-week randomized, examiner-blind, comparative clinical study showed the oscillating-rotating toothbrush, with a novel brush head incorporating angled CrissCross bristles, was significantly better than an advanced sonic power tooth brush at reducing gingival inflammation and bleeding, as well as reducing whole mouth plaque, plaque along the gumline, and in the approximal regions. (J Clin Dent 2014;25:6 ‐12)
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    23
    References
    11
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []