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We have tried and tested the best electric toothbrushes to help you keep your teeth and gums healthy and squeaky clean — check out our all-time favorites ahead of Black Friday. However ...
Scientists found more than 600 distinct viruses after swabbing peoples' toothbrushes and shower heads — but thankfully, the vast majority of them are more helpful than harmful. "There is so much ...
We have tested the best electric toothbrushes for kids: From toddler-friendly products to fun-filled gadgets for pre-teens, these are the best toothbrushes to look for during the Black Friday sale.
Toothbrushes, whether manual or electric, are considered by the U.S. government to be medical devices. They fall within the Food and Drug Administration's class I category, meaning that they are ...
Toothbrushes aren't one of them. They are, however, essential—one of the few grooming products we award that you can't live without. Finding the perfect one is imperative. I'm one of those ...
In a new study published in Frontiers in Microbiomes, researchers from Northwestern University collected samples from 32 toothbrushes and 92 showerheads across the United States and found hundreds of ...
Choosing the appropriate toothbrush can drastically affect the cleanliness and overall dental health throughout the course of your orthodontic treatment. When looking for the best toothbrush for ...
Northwestern University ... and 34 toothbrush samples — and no two samples were alike. “The number of viruses that we found is absolutely wild,” said indoor microbiologist Erica M.
Researchers at Northwestern University studied two things that most people use everyday—their toothbrush and showerhead—to see what was living in each. What they found was “quite surprising ...
Shower heads and toothbrushes are brimming with ... is phage,” study co-author and Northwestern University environmental microbiologist Erica M. Hartmann tells Popular Science.
In a new Northwestern University-led study, microbiologists found that showerheads and toothbrushes are teeming ... wild," said Northwestern's Erica M. Hartmann, who led the study.