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dental health

For the Indian dental heath experts are incompatible over the whether mouthwashes might lead to oral cancer. There is one section says the alcoholic content does guide to the illness, but another claims it can actually stop the cancer.

The results of an appraisal published in the Indian dental associated found there was "enough proof" that "alcohol-containing mouthwashes contributed to the increased risk of growth of oral cancer".

By our doctor review, called for mouthwashes containing alcohol to be removed from superstore shelves and reclassified as ‘prescription only’.

But the head of our University, the most efficient or more reliable doctors, said yesterday that mouthwash was more probable to help stop cancer than bring it on.

"We have the whole range of reasons that why some mouth rinses would actually decrease the chance of the cancer because they damage the production of molecules that do have cancer-causing effects like acetaldehyde".

There is text which is now recommending that mouth rinses be used to decrease bacteria that are produce acetaldehyde and there is a fairly strong agreement internationally that mouth rinses containing alcohol are not connected to cancer."

Bu our expert that acetaldehyde, a toxic by-product of alcohol that is supposed to be carcinogenic, may build up in the oral cavity when mouthwash is used.

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