Blog 
                        Post 1: 
                        Debunking 
                        Dental Myths
                       
                      Debunking 
                        Dental Myths
                         
                        By Eric Cheung, DDS
                        Atwater Family Dental Blog Series: Debunking Dental Myths 
                        
                       
                      
                        In 
                          today’s online world, anyone with a product and 
                          a camera can become a “dental expert.” Scroll 
                          through social media, and you’ll see endless ads 
                          for charcoal toothpaste, instant whitening gels, and 
                          miracle mouth rinses that promise to give you a “Hollywood 
                          smile.” The problem? Many of these claims are 
                          more fiction than fact — and the laws protecting 
                          consumers haven’t caught up.
                        The 
                          Off-Label Problem
                        Some 
                          companies or influencers recommend using chemicals or 
                          dental materials off-label — meaning in a way 
                          the product wasn’t designed or approved for. In 
                          dentistry, that can be dangerous. Your teeth and gums 
                          are living tissues, not test surfaces. What might look 
                          “safe” in a video could cause real damage 
                          in your mouth.
                        For 
                          example, a paste designed for polishing metal fillings 
                          should never be used as daily toothpaste. Yet some viral 
                          “hacks” do exactly that. The enamel you 
                          lose from one bad idea doesn’t grow back.
                        The 
                          Loophole in the Law
                        You 
                          might think that false advertising would get a company 
                          into trouble — but the truth is more complicated. 
                          Current laws give marketing teams a lot of freedom with 
                          “creative language.” As long as they avoid 
                          outright falsehoods, they can imply just about anything.
                        Think 
                          of it this way: if a company claims their toothpaste 
                          gives your teeth “wings,” they don’t 
                          have to prove that you can fly — only that their 
                          product won’t harm you while you’re trying. 
                          It sounds ridiculous, but in the world of dental marketing, 
                          vagueness sells.
                        That’s 
                          why the ADA Seal of Acceptance matters. It means the 
                          product has submitted research to show their marketing 
                          has valid proof. And the proof has been, reviewed by 
                          American Dental Association. If a product doesn’t 
                          have that seal, it’s up to you to question whether 
                          it’s really evidence-based.
                        Evidence 
                          or Illusion?
                        Before 
                          trusting a product’s promise, ask yourself:
                       
                       
                         
                          • 
                            Is there independent research to support it?
                          • 
                            Were the studies funded by the company itself?
                          • 
                            Does the ADA or another dental organization recognize 
                            it?
                          • 
                            What are the long-term side effects that aren’t 
                            being disclosed?
                         
                      
                       
                        Sometimes 
                          a product “works” for one purpose but quietly 
                          causes another problem. For example, a whitening toothpaste 
                          might have a tiny effect on tooth whitening — 
                          but if it causes so much sensitivity that you need another 
                          dental product to take care of the other issue.
                        The 
                          Hidden Cost of Misinformation
                        The 
                          most concerning part of misleading dental ads isn’t 
                          just the wasted money — it’s the delay in 
                          professional care. Patients who trust “miracle 
                          fixes” often skip cleanings or real treatments 
                          until the damage becomes painful or expensive to fix.
                        Final 
                          Word: Trust Evidence, Not Influencers
                        In 
                          the next couple of weeks, let’s find out what 
                          our dental community found out on some dental myths.
                        A 
                          healthy smile doesn’t come from trends. It comes 
                          from trust, science, and regular care.
                         
                        References
                        Tomás, 
                          D. B. M., Pecci-Lloret, M. P., & Guerrero-Gironés, 
                          J. (2023). Effectiveness and abrasiveness of activated 
                          charcoal as a whitening agent: A systematic review of 
                          in vitro studies. Annals of Anatomy, 245, 151998. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aanat.2023.151998
                        American 
                          Dental Association. (2024). Charcoal toothpaste fact 
                          sheet.
                          https://www.ada.org/resources/research/charcoal-toothpaste
                        Joiner, 
                          A. (2006). The bleaching of teeth: A review of the literature. 
                          Journal of Dentistry, 34(7), 412–419. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2006.02.002