Procter & Gamble will remove polyethylene microbeads from its Crest toothpaste line after a dental hygienist spoke out about finding the blue plastic bits in patients' gums. The microbeads can trap ...
But TikTok user Julia (@julesjulesbobules), in a viral TikTok video, claims that her child’s teeth were stained after he used Crest Pro-Health toothpaste. And she believes the toothpaste is the ...
Dedicated at Procter & Gamble in Cincinnati, Ohio, on April 3, 2024, and Indiana University in Bloomington on April 4, 2024 The history of toothpaste extends back to ancient times in Egypt.
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