Purified Water, PEG 400, Sorbitol, Zeodent, Stepanol WA 100, Flavoring, Titanium Dioxide, Sodium Benzoate, Betaine-glycine, and Splenda®
$14.95
Toothpaste with pleasant mint flavor, and containing drug-free antimicrobial formula PAC5. Designed to fight biofilm plaque.
9768 in stock
Purified Water, PEG 400, Sorbitol, Zeodent, Stepanol WA 100, Flavoring, Titanium Dioxide, Sodium Benzoate, Betaine-glycine, and Splenda®
Adults and children 3 years of age and older: Brush teeth thoroughly, preferably after each meal or at least twice a day, or as directed by your oral hygienist. Small children 3 to 6 years of age should use only a small amount (approximately the size of a pea).
Keep out of reach of children under 6 years old so that a large quantity is not accidentally ingested, causing a blocked airway. Brushing and rinsing should always be supervised by an adult. Store at room temperature.
NET WT 4 oz (114g)
The active ingredient, PAC5® is a safe, non-toxic antimicrobial technology which is not an antibiotic or oxidizing agent. All the ingredients are listed on the label of each product.
EXXCL products are U.S. FDA-compliant.
We recommend that our products be used within 18 months, although they remain effective beyond that period of time.
Storage under normal ambient temperatures like those found in a dental office or home is fine. Do not refrigerate any EXXCL products.
We recommend using EXXCL Oral Blue Toothpaste™ because it also contains PAC5®, our infection-fighting formula.
Yes, nearly all of the commercially-available mouthwashes are antibacterial to some degree. But none has any significant effect on biofilms, which constitute the vast majority of chronic oral infections, such as biofilm plaque. PAC5®, the active ingredient in all EXXCL products, not only kills the microbes that cause biofilm infections, it penetrates the biofilm mass, kills the inhabitants, and removes the biofilm mass from the structure to which it is attached.
There are a number of intraoral disorders not caused by bacterial infection, which should be considered in this instance. A patient should also be evaluated for systemic disorders which can affect gum health.