Aquila
Muse
- Joined
- May 30, 2006
- Messages
- 632
Has anyone else had a similar experience to me?
A few months ago I looked in the mirror and decided that my teeth just weren't anywhere near as white as those belonging to the people on TV, so I went down to the drugstore and bought one of those tooth-whitening kits, the kind with a pen, not the strips. You squeeze the stuff on before you go to bed and it works while you sleep, and in two weeks you're supposed to look like the people on TV. You can't smoke or kiss anyone after putting it on.
The first night I noticed a slight tingling in my canines and molars but thought that it was just a sign that the stuff was working.
The next afternoon, the tingling has become quite pronounced, but I thought oh well, beauty entails sacrifice, so never mind. So I put the stuff on the second night. JEEZ...it took my ages to get to sleep as the tingling had progressed to a dull pain in 4 or 5 of my teeth. By the next day, I had a full blown toothache in one side of my face and had to take tylenol just to function. I went to the dentist who gave me an X-ray and said I was fine apart from some peridontal recession. He gave me some Sensodyne toothpaste and said that the pain would probably go away. I stopped using the whitening pen but the toothache just seemed to get worse. After two days on Tylenol, and also trying Naprosyn (Alleve) I called my dentist again and he said I should get a thorough exam by another dentist. So I had a very high tech x-ray by a dentist who wanted to do a root-canal.
Finally, I woke up to the fact that the pain might be due to my coninued use of a toothpaste with "whitening gel" - the main ingredient of which is hydrogen peroxide. The stuff must have gotten though my enamel (which had already been weakened by the whitening pen) and it felt like it was literally burning away my tooth-nerve. It was EXCRUTIATING.
It's probably all due to my vanity, but I do think that there should be stronger warning labels on these whitening products. The product did have a very small section in the instructions, but I think that it should have printed in large red type on the front of the box.
Also, I use Tom's toothpaste, which is one of the few without sacharin or sweeteners, but still contains the foaming agent sodium lauryl sulfate, which many people find aggravates mouth abrasions. Why can't we buy a toothpaste without this chemical?
A few months ago I looked in the mirror and decided that my teeth just weren't anywhere near as white as those belonging to the people on TV, so I went down to the drugstore and bought one of those tooth-whitening kits, the kind with a pen, not the strips. You squeeze the stuff on before you go to bed and it works while you sleep, and in two weeks you're supposed to look like the people on TV. You can't smoke or kiss anyone after putting it on.
The first night I noticed a slight tingling in my canines and molars but thought that it was just a sign that the stuff was working.
The next afternoon, the tingling has become quite pronounced, but I thought oh well, beauty entails sacrifice, so never mind. So I put the stuff on the second night. JEEZ...it took my ages to get to sleep as the tingling had progressed to a dull pain in 4 or 5 of my teeth. By the next day, I had a full blown toothache in one side of my face and had to take tylenol just to function. I went to the dentist who gave me an X-ray and said I was fine apart from some peridontal recession. He gave me some Sensodyne toothpaste and said that the pain would probably go away. I stopped using the whitening pen but the toothache just seemed to get worse. After two days on Tylenol, and also trying Naprosyn (Alleve) I called my dentist again and he said I should get a thorough exam by another dentist. So I had a very high tech x-ray by a dentist who wanted to do a root-canal.
Finally, I woke up to the fact that the pain might be due to my coninued use of a toothpaste with "whitening gel" - the main ingredient of which is hydrogen peroxide. The stuff must have gotten though my enamel (which had already been weakened by the whitening pen) and it felt like it was literally burning away my tooth-nerve. It was EXCRUTIATING.
It's probably all due to my vanity, but I do think that there should be stronger warning labels on these whitening products. The product did have a very small section in the instructions, but I think that it should have printed in large red type on the front of the box.
Also, I use Tom's toothpaste, which is one of the few without sacharin or sweeteners, but still contains the foaming agent sodium lauryl sulfate, which many people find aggravates mouth abrasions. Why can't we buy a toothpaste without this chemical?